Thank you for your answer/opinion :D (I guess i meant headbanging^^ sorry) I think it's not damaging, as long as it's just headbanging it for a limited amount of time (to separate the hair strands so that it will dry faster) Personally, I am at tailbone now and I can't see any damage from it I don't rub it with a towel (!) But I make a little "turbant" keep it there for a couple of minutes and then headbang some water out! We were never allowed to whip hair around but that is cultural. I think thick as in dense hair can withstand this tratment lot more than wispy and thin hair. I think I was taught this and it was pretty much the norm in my family where most girls have/had long thick hair. You just reminded me that when I was young (traditional indian hair care) after blotting the hair with thin towel I used to whip it lightly with the towel (thin soft cotton) while holding the ends together to remove the debris of shikakai or chickpea flour that was used to wash the hair and itbwould get quite dry too during the process. By all means use occlusives (oils and silicones) as well but not instead, you should not need to use a non penetrating oil so often. Conditioner residues (ingredients like cationic surfactants, fatty alcohols, panthenol, hydrolysed protein) help protect the hair from friction/ mechanical damage and can patch repair. If you cannot brush your hair wet then comb it, but also maybe review at the ingredients and pH of your products? By all means oil your hair but it seems to me you are using that to substitute for adequate conditioning. I can imagine whipping long hair would not only cause tangles but stretch the hair nearer the roots due to the weight of the lengths plus water. Any towel with fluffy fibres can ruffle the cuticle. Few of us here rub with the towel anyway, we blot turban or squeeze so limited friction the water is being taken out by capillary action. I hope that it doesn't damage my hair, at least, because my hair seems to like this method :D (But I rarely find anything my hair "doesn't" like *shrugs*)įriction is damaging, be that brush against hair, hair against hair or towel against hair. Thank you for your answer :) I always thought that my hair would tangle too if I just whipped it around, but surprisingly enough, it doesn't cause tangles in my hair, but I do use grapeseed oil on my hair and ends everytime I wash it and when I go to bed, so I guess it is protected from tangles^^ (If I don't use grapeseed oil, then I can't even brush through my hair when it's wet and drying :O) If I flip my hair around, especially when wet it tangles terribly but other than that it should be fine I'd have thought I think the main problem would be tangles. Thank you for your answer^^ Yes, that's the damage I'm afraid off :O I've tried those other methods too, but I just aren't sure which method is the most gentle on hair^^ Why don't you gently blot with a microfibre or flour sack towel or cotton t-shirt? Probably not a massive deal on short hair tho. Keep scrolling for 15 of our favorite celebrity wet hair looks.Potential to stretch it in its weakened state, also strands rubbing against strand. Let us present the evidence that proves it with help from our experts below. Well, not yet.Īs scrupulous research into celebrity sightings of wet-look hair show, the style doesn't just work, but it looks incredible on all sorts of hair textures, types, and lengths. Will you end up looking like some chic secret agent from a spy film, or will you end up looking like a disheveled mess blown in from a rainstorm? It's a hair roulette that we just haven't had the guts to spin. But have we actually bitten the proverbial bullet? Have we dunked our hands into pots of slimy hair gel and offered our hair up to the wet-look gods? No, of course, we haven't because we're wimps.īut we can't just hang this phobia on fear of gunky gel (and the rock-solid fallout, too) because unless you have super-long, super-straight hair, attempting wet-look hair can be treacherous territory. When it comes to party-appropriate hair, the wet-look finish is something that rears its glossy head year after year.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |