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Curly Hair

curlyhair
Curly Hair curlygirl 1 year ago 100%
Wiki / Useful Links

[What is my hair type?](https://lemmy.world/post/217023) [Ultimate CG Guide by r/curlyhair mod team](https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Q6Dj9WAZxlfBhJSyS5on2rw3-if5cOV3oV-dQ3B0AHA/edit?usp=drivesdk). Note: you do not have to follow the curly girl method listed here, it's ok to use shampoo, sulfates, and silicones if they are working for you / [Mirror](https://docs.google.com/document/d/1LPqALWxwmod_hLye57wXXcnpVmYTkQTP8wZpYk6BoZ0/edit?usp=drivesdk) But if you do want to follow CGM [here is an ingredient checker](https://www.curlsbot.com/) [r/curlyhair Holy Grail List](https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1gn6VnPsRU1H3ziElbWqNVFY5mev6GB1pwKKt_MNpoAY/edit?usp=sharing) / [Mirror](https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1t9zECaaET_7kWEKHjUNFa8uqOAqBD7yzhDf9nn-1-hw/edit?usp=drivesdk) [International product list](https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/u/3/d/e/2PACX-1vTbVtl5RKQyRwtOlctXVt4f8HovDNVjRUkXBMt3l_DpnkSS0Q-wQ3d77_nf20EJ2yPEFpsuvb6Aa52c/pubhtml) / [Mirror](https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/17u0KA8VBQqArJO5OHcVKECWef6UeFfbLUm0Xh3Kr-vo/edit?usp=drivesdk) [Types of frizz and How to Tame Them](https://lemmy.world/post/151416) [Protein and Moisture do not balance](https://lemmy.world/post/146122) [Humidity and Humectants Part I](https://lemmy.world/post/86114) [Humidity Resistant Ingredients Part II](https://lemmy.world/post/712277) [Hard Water 101](https://lemmy.world/post/620687) [Types of split ends](https://lemmy.world/post/399187) [Porosity](https://lemmy.world/post/681260)

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curlyhair
Curly Hair curlygirl 1 year ago 100%
What type of content do you want to see in this community? (Vote in comments)

I've been mostly posting whatever interesting/amusing thing I come across. Vote in the comments to guide what I should post more of, feel free to suggest something else I have not listed.

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curlyhair
Curly Hair curlygirl 1 year ago 100%
Finding your hair type @welshiecurlgirl

![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/f22ca114-b76b-43df-95e0-af3da429980c.jpeg) ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/d2c786dd-f8fb-4bc5-a9b6-0fa6f09c38c4.jpeg) ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/8a749057-971c-44e7-8e7f-863ecaa87cfd.jpeg) ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/9d367614-fc7e-494f-b1df-9165dea3eae6.jpeg) ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/8f79ad8b-54aa-44f6-96ad-239cc8be414c.jpeg) ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/fbc9f504-dd9a-4200-afe4-006caf43f1fc.jpeg) Taken from: https://www.instagram.com/p/CN_DoYJBDJs

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curlyhair
Curly Hair Perspective 1 month ago 96%
Frizz MONSTER!

Please help! I live in the netherlands, where it's crazy humid, I have long, very very thin baby like hair, which frizzes like a tangle ball. It's FULL of tangles and even right after a shower & bruahing it tangles up and feels and looks frizzy. I currently use the Jessy curl line for shampoo, panten volume for clarifying shampoo, conditioner and treatment deep conditioner, and jessy curl oil + Gel. A few weeks ago I started using hair styling spray from John Frieda - frizz ease. I think it helps somewhat... I even cut 2.6 inches off my hair and it didn't seem to help with the "damaged look". My hair is completely natural, and I dont heat style, tho I started defusing a few weeks ago instead of air drying, which seems to have helped somewhat with the frizz... I sleep on silk pillow cases, either in a loose bun (cause I can't pineapple anymore because my hair is too long) or In a silk bonnet. I even dry my hair with a 100% cotton t shirt. I do it all!! It shouldn't look so damaged and frizzy!! When I sleep on soft rolls my hair looks better the next day, but very soon it starts tangling and getting frizzy again... PLEASE! HELP ME! Perhaps I need to go back to silicones? Right now I don't even care about the curls or nothing, I just want my hair to stop being so god damn frizzy. Please help!!! Products that I can use???

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curlyhair
Curly Hair berryjam 3 months ago 85%
Looking for a gentle daily shampoo

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/16609017 > Please recommend me a shampoo! I have 2b/2c wavy hair. I currently use tresemme flawless curls shampoo+conditioner 2x/week. I'm looking to start using a gentle shampoo more often now that it's summer and I'm working out 6 days a week. > > US drugstore brands preferred but I wouldn't mind driving to a cosmetics store to stock up. :) > > (I hope it's okay to post here - the hair communities I could find are all inactive.)

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curlyhair
Curly Hair igg 1 year ago 100%
Why do I get hair clumps? https://imgur.com/a/WgwzA08

Why do I get hair clumps a lot that I need to tear out? I wash hair 2-4x/wk. Most often use Carols daughter wdd shampoo , wide tooth comb in shower, microfiber towel, and denman brush, but on occasion I use asiam conditioner or asiam gel. Reset wash monthly

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curlyhair
Curly Hair Classy 1 year ago 94%
General haircare help and product recommendations?

##Overview I have not cut my hair since 2018. I went to a stylist maybe 3 years ago to get my hair thinned but otherwise it's been just growing freely for many years. I've never had hair like this prior to now and any advice on treatment for it so it can be healthier would be appreciated. It's incredibly thick. When it's in a pony tail, at the base of my skull it is probably about 1"—1¼" diameter. I've never really been able to freely run my fingers or a straight comb through my hair, as it gets caught on random kinks or tangles along the way. I use a soft bristle wet hairbrush and it has been fantastic for controlling my hair. I notice texturally my hair tends to have a somewhat paradoxical feeling of being dry and oily at the same time. Even after shampooing, if I feel my hair, the skin on my hand will seem to have a bit of oily buildup on it. But even so, you can see that my hair is often frizzy and the physical sensation as I touch it is of it being rather dry. It often takes a bit of time to soak my hair when showering, maybe 3-4 minutes of running water. When wet, my hair sits at about my pec, and I've measured some follicles to be over 16" long, though when dry the hair bounces up significantly, barely touching my shoulders. ##Goals I would love my hair to not be so voluminous when dry. It is poofy, out of control. I just want it to sit down a little more so I can have it down without constantly battling it to not get in my face and mouth. I want my hair to feel smoother. Is silky a goal? Who knows. I've gotten a lot of compliments on my hair over the years and I feel like it could be much better looking than it is now. If kinkiness and tangles are an inevitable symptom of my hair type, so be it. Otherwise, I would really enjoy being able to run my hands through my hair without accidentally putting strands out in the process. Thank you for your consideration and time!

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curlyhair
Curly Hair LorenzoStomp 1 year ago 100%
Using a micro fibre towel after applying product - doesn't that just remove product?

I've seen Mell and others do this to speed drying (and her hair does always turn out lovely), but it seems like you'd be pulling out the product you just spent time carefully working into your hair. You could gently re-add product, but the whole time you are applying product you are supposed to keep wetting your hair to make sure the product works correctly, so it seems like you end up in a loop of wet hair-add product-hair too wet-dry hair but remove product-rewet hair to add product-hair too wet-ad nauseum. If it's okay to suck out some of the product to get your hair drier faster, doesn't that imply you shouldn't need that much product in the first place? Or that your hair doesn't need to be that wet to add it in the first place?

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curlyhair
Curly Hair LorenzoStomp 1 year ago 91%
Does anyone have experience with - idk what they should be called - "single unit" diffusers?

Hi everybody! It looks pretty dead in here from the age of the most recent posts, which makes me sad because this was such a healthy, useful community on Reddit (good riddance), so I'm guessing I won't get any responses. But hey, you gotta be the change you want to see, so here goes: I'm talking about the type of hair dryer that has a diffuser built into it so it can only be used for diffusing, not any other type of hairdrying. They seem to just be called "diffusers" so it's hard to search for them, but I've seen one from [BedHead](https://www.amazon.com/Bed-Head-Curls-Check-Diffuser/dp/B00JXQ06X8/ref=sr_1_2?crid=1N757RUXE1F6R&keywords=bedhead+curls+diffuser&qid=1694347292&s=beauty&sprefix=%2Cbeauty%2C534&sr=1-2), this very similar item from [Revlon](https://www.amazon.com/Revlon-1875W-Natural-Texture-Diffuser/dp/B07TXM2L29/ref=sr_1_2?crid=32JVOWQESM8WB&keywords=revlon+curls+diffuser&qid=1694347341&s=beauty&sprefix=revlon+curls+diffuser%2Cbeauty%2C98&sr=1-2), and this different (more expensive, but from the looks of it possibly better designed?) style from [Bellisima Italia](https://www.amazon.com/Bellissima-Italia-Diffon-DF1-5000/dp/B0BM78ZDR6/ref=sr_1_3?crid=J8LS2F8QW9PC&keywords=bellissima+curls+diffuser&qid=1694347390&s=beauty&sprefix=bellisima+curls+diffuser%2Cbeauty%2C101&sr=1-3&ufe=app_do%3Aamzn1.fos.006c50ae-5d4c-4777-9bc0-4513d670b6bc). Has anyone used one of these? How do they compare to the attachment types? I've currently got a refurb Shark, which I'm pretty happy with, but it's big (hard to pack/store) and heavy and occasionally I manage to knock the diffuser off the end even with the magnets, because I am horribly clumsy. I never use a dryer without a diffuser, so I thought "Hey, why don't they make just a diffusing device? It would be lighter and smaller and no more struggling with keeping the diffuser on the nozzle!" And it turns out they do but I've never seen anyone talk about them so I figure there must be some hidden problem, right?

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curlyhair
Curly Hair cadamanteus 1 year ago 92%
Are we posting hair pics here yet?

Routine: - As I Am Dry & Itchy shampoo and conditioner - Scrunch in LA Looks Extreme Sport Gel on wet hair, a dollop for front and back - Scrunch dry with microfiber towel - Diffuse with low heat, then cool, until about 70% dry or I'm bored - Air dry, then scrunch out the crunch

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curlyhair
Curly Hair curlygirl 1 year ago 72%
3 ways to diffuse for definition, volume, or elongation - Manes by Mell https://youtu.be/4nk5p4OWIIs

Definition: hover diffuse. Volume: scrunch diffuse. Elongation: diffuse with comb

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curlyhair
Curly Hair TwoGems 1 year ago 100%
Edited

Edited

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curlyhair
Curly Hair Deniiss 1 year ago 100%
Help with CG Method + general questions

Hello im new to the CG method, i wanted to ask questions to the community but since we cant create more posts in the reddit well i will try there. So basically i tried the whole curly girl method but at the end when i “break the hardness” of the hair when the gel is dried my hair cause a lot of flakes, and also how to avoid frizziness ? my hair deal with it a lot and its so annoying, i think gel might work but rn it cause a lot of flakes. thank you in advance for your help PS : the type of hair im trying to achieve is the messy fringe haircut for males picture : ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/2442c649-94fe-48b8-a885-f727aa45cc4a.jpeg) Also if there is a easier way to discuss with the community such as a discord or something please send me the invite thank you

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curlyhair
Curly Hair curlygirl 1 year ago 80%
DIY V-shaped Haircut - Manes by Mell https://youtu.be/gKrzwicXx-A

My hairstylist left the state, I have severe trust issues so I've been trying to cut my hair myself. I have a V shape and long layers so I tried this haircut to just trim the ends. It came out alright, not as good as my hairstylist would have done but acceptable. I still recommend you go to a hairstylist but for anyone like me, this might help. I trimmed very little this first time, I'm planning to trim just a little bit over the next few washes as I get used to it, no more than maybe 2 inches total.

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curlyhair
Curly Hair curlygirl 1 year ago 100%
5 Haircare Myths (Shampoo, Moisture, Trims, and more) - Dr. Dray https://youtu.be/kT3JMo3BTmA

1. Shampooing every day is bad for your hair Not all hair types can handle shampooing every day but it isn't bad for everyone. Shampooing is meant to cleanse the scalp. It prevent yeast from causing inflammation, dandruff, and hair loss. This buildup needs to be removed. 2. Shampoos will make my hair grow No such thing as a shampoo that will make your hair grow. Make sure that you get rid of the oily buildup with shampoo but there are no ingredients that can grow your hair. Medicated shampoos don't grow hair or affect the hair cycle, they help reduce inflammation. Shampoos with protein marketed for thin hair can make hair appear thicker but it is not getting thicker. 3. Dry hair needs moisture Moisture (water) makes hair frizzy and brittle and prone to breakage. Humidity can cause breakage because of all the moisture (water) content in the air. You want instead products that help coat the hair and keep it smooth and prevent it from absorbing so much moisture. You need conditioning products for hair. Wet hair is very delicate. Coconut oil can help reduce hygral fatigue when you apply before your shower. 4. You need to trim the hair every 6 weeks for it to grow and avoid split ends It's not right for everyone. Trimming ends does not affect how much hair comes out of your follicle. If you have split ends, you will need trims to avoid breakage. Trims don't prevent split ends, trims gets rid of them. Use deep conditioning products and avoid too much heat to prevent split ends. 5. Your hair gets used to your shampoo and conditioner Products have ingredients that make them unique for a specific outcome. Your hair does not get used to it. Your hair might need a change if the product isn't giving you results because of the change in environment, etc. But it is not because your hair gets used to it.

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curlyhair
Curly Hair grasshopper_mouse 1 year ago 100%
Detangler brush recommendation www.target.com

Hello fellow curly-haired people! I just wanted to recommend the linked detangler brush. I use this one in the shower on wet hair and it has been a game-changer-- way less pulling and breakage and hair loss in general. I was using a wide-tooth comb before I came across this brush, but it's soooo much nicer and I don't spend 30 minutes picking through my hair now. If you haven't tried one of these brushes, it's totally worth the $5!

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curlyhair
Curly Hair curlygirl 1 year ago 100%
Wet vs Dry Detangling @welshiecurlgirl

![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/aae777cf-8598-4c66-9a60-413b53ffaf90.jpeg) ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/b5ff5ae6-937b-4a4c-b08e-939742ac6758.jpeg) ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/e4cb78c5-2c8c-4a30-a8bf-584d530fad9e.jpeg) Taken from: https://www.instagram.com/p/CZNZ5EoIqNx

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curlyhair
Curly Hair curlygirl 1 year ago 100%
How to use heat safely - Manes by Mell https://youtu.be/3rNLBJSIqXk

Heat can crack and fray hair by destroying the proteins in hair. The vibrancy will fade, tone will change, there will be a loss of pigment, it will lose shine, and hair will become dull. Heat damage will also cause split ends and breakage. Straightening and curling irons can go 360-450°F or 185-230°C. Water boils at 212°F or 100°C. Hair can hold 30% of its weight in water. When there is excessive heat (like above water's boiling point) applied to hair that is still wet, the water will burst out into steam and greatly damage the cuticle. Benefits of using heat: easier manipulation, can set styles with better results, and efficiency. How to use heat safely: - use a diffuser for indirect heat - lower the heat setting - use a hair dryer with excellent temperature control that does not go above 212°F or 100°C - squeeze out all water by towel drying before using heat - use the hover diffuse method - use a heat protectant (like products with PVP/DMAPA acrylates copolymer, quaternium 70, hydrolyzed wheat protein, and especially silicones) Unless you are using temperatures above water's boiling point (212°F or 100°C), heat damage is less of an issue Before using irons feel if hair is still wet. If hair is cold when you touch it, it is still wet. Use irons on dry hair only. If you have fine hair, use lower heat, heat protectant, and products with protein in them to strengthen hair

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curlyhair
Curly Hair The1stSam 1 year ago 100%
Had a good hair day
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curlyhair
Curly Hair curlygirl 1 year ago 90%
What everyone gets wrong about shampoo - Lab Muffin Beauty Science https://youtu.be/-_3P3OGVzSA

What everyone gets wrong with shampoo Lots of people say you have to use sulfate-free shampoo to avoid damaging or stripping your hair. There also people who say you have to use shampoo with sulfates to get your hair clean. They are both wrong. Academic hair science is a mess. Hair is very diverse. Different hair reacts differently to ingredients. Ingredients work similarly on skin but with hair, ingredients work differently. If 100 people use glycerin on their skin, you might have 60 people’s skin get more hydrated and improve, 20 people’s skin stays around the same, the final 20 might get worse for some reason – like the glycerin helped some other ingredient penetrate and their skin got irritated, or they have an allergy. There’s still complexity, but you wouldn’t have half the people’s skin dry out more. But that’s kind of how it is with hair. Variation in curl pattern can also affect how ingredients work. When it comes to wet vs dry detangling, water makes hair weaker inside and cuticles raise so you should detangle when dry. At least on straight hair. But on curly hair, hair sticks less to each other (like spiral pasta vs spaghetti pasta) and the weakening bonds makes it less damaging and results in less breakage. But even then, we still don't know everything (which is better for wavy hair, what if you use a brush or comb, what if you bleach your hair, what if your hair is longer, etc.). There's a lot of variables. Hair science is really sparse. You can't generalize hair. Even things like humidity can change the results. The structure of hair as we know it is still evolving and there isn't a lot of consistency in terminology. For example, around the late 90s, some hair scientists decided that half the protein in hair wouldn’t be called keratin anymore. But not everyone follows this. You’ll see things like “hair is 80% keratin by mass” in a paper from 2017. It’s clear they’re using the old definition – but if a paper says “we concluded that this ingredient works on keratin in hair”, what do they mean by “keratin?" Hair products aren't about individual ingredients, it is about the overall formulation. Sulfates usually refers to sodium lauryl sulfate and sodium laureth sulfate, which are surfactants. Surfactants help break up oil and mingle with water so you can rinse it. Sulfates have sulfate heads, the tails are similar to other surfactants. These 4 diagrams show 4 different ways that shampoos clean at a microscopic level – each diagram goes from left to right. The pink tadpoles are the surfactants. ![](https://labmuffin.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/surfactant-diagrams-1.jpg) You can see that the surfactants are working together to clean the hair. This is called a supramolecular process, where molecules are interacting without going through a chemical reaction. And all 4 of these are probably happening on your hair at the same time, to different extents – there’s probably more mechanisms still to be discovered. How much of each one is happening depends on the formula of the shampoo and what type of stuff you are cleaning off. If you look at the ingredients, you'll have 3 or more surfactants. If you change the ratio of the ingredients or swap one of these surfactants with something else, the shampoo will work differently. Plus there's other ingredients like polymers to take into account. The texture of the shampoo and opening of the bottle changes how it disperses and spreads as well. Even just checking the pH of a product isn't the whole picture when it is so complex. Cosmetic formulators spend a lot of time just doing trial and error, making formulas and trying them out. Changing little things about the formula causes big changes. Good Housekeeping did a test with 10 shampoo and conditioner pairings. Some had sulfates and some didn’t. The set that stripped hair dye the least had sulfates – it was Tresemme’s Keratin Smooth Color set. Formulators know that people who go for sulfate free want a gentler shampoo so that's what they aim for when making the formulation. They know there’s all these widespread myths about sulfates being harsh – they’ve been around since the 90s. Adding sulfates doesn't mean it will strip more. There’s a good chance that if you grab a random shampoo with sulfates, and a random shampoo without sulfates, the one with sulfates will clean better because of product design and that's how they were formulated. It’s not because just adding sulfates automatically makes shampoos strip more. They might have also added other ingredients to make the hair feel cleaner. How well it foams doesn't tell you how well it cleans. How well something foams depends on how a formula interacts with air and water to stabilise a thin stretched out film of water. Cleaning is about how it interacts with oil and dirt. But if something doesn’t foam when we use it, we tend to feel it isn’t cleaning well. It’s just a psychological thing. How well a shampoo cleans is complicated. Bottom line: Sulfate-free and sulfate-containing don’t really mean much. How well a shampoo cleans is too complicated to predict that easily. It’s much more useful to look at what the shampoo is telling you. If it says “clarifying” it’s a shampoo designed to clean your hair better, if it says “colour protection”, it can have sulfates and still strip dye less. It’s also really useful to look at reviews from people with similar hair to you and try a sample before buying.

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curlyhair
Curly Hair initf 1 year ago 66%
What everyone gets wrong about shampoo - Lab Muffin Beauty Science youtu.be

Lots of people say you have to use sulfate-free shampoo to avoid damaging or stripping your hair. There also people who say you have to use shampoo with sulfates to get your hair clean. They are both wrong. Academic hair science is a mess. Hair is very diverse. Different hair reacts differently to ingredients. Ingredients work similarly on skin but with hair, ingredients work differently. If 100 people use glycerin on their skin, you might have 60 people’s skin get more hydrated and improve, 20 people’s skin stays around the same, the final 20 might get worse for some reason – like the glycerin helped some other ingredient penetrate and their skin got irritated, or they have an allergy. There’s still complexity, but you wouldn’t have half the people’s skin dry out more. But that’s kind of how it is with hair. Variation in curl pattern can also affect how ingredients work. When it comes to wet vs dry detangling, water makes hair weaker inside and cuticles raise so you should detangle when dry. At least on straight hair. But on curly hair, hair sticks less to each other (like spiral pasta vs spaghetti pasta) and the weakening bonds makes it less damaging and results in less breakage. But even then, we still don't know everything (which is better for wavy hair, what if you use a brush or comb, what if you bleach your hair, what if your hair is longer, etc.). There's a lot of variables. Hair science is really sparse. You can't generalize hair. Even things like humidity can change the results. The structure of hair as we know it is still evolving and there isn't a lot of consistency in terminology. For example, around the late 90s, some hair scientists decided that half the protein in hair wouldn’t be called keratin anymore. But not everyone follows this. You’ll see things like “hair is 80% keratin by mass” in a paper from 2017. It’s clear they’re using the old definition – but if a paper says “we concluded that this ingredient works on keratin in hair”, what do they mean by “keratin?" Hair products aren't about individual ingredients, it is about the overall formulation. Sulfates usually refers to sodium lauryl sulfate and sodium laureth sulfate, which are surfactants. Surfactants help break up oil and mingle with water so you can rinse it. Sulfates have sulfate heads, the tails are similar to other surfactants. These 4 diagrams show 4 different ways that shampoos clean at a microscopic level – each diagram goes from left to right. The pink tadpoles are the surfactants. ![](https://labmuffin.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/surfactant-diagrams-1.jpg) You can see that the surfactants are working together to clean the hair. This is called a supramolecular process, where molecules are interacting without going through a chemical reaction. And all 4 of these are probably happening on your hair at the same time, to different extents – there’s probably more mechanisms still to be discovered. How much of each one is happening depends on the formula of the shampoo and what type of stuff you are cleaning off. If you look at the ingredients, you'll have 3 or more surfactants. If you change the ratio of the ingredients or swap one of these surfactants with something else, the shampoo will work differently. Plus there's other ingredients like polymers to take into account. The texture of the shampoo and opening of the bottle changes how it disperses and spreads as well. Even just checking the pH of a product isn't the whole picture when it is so complex. Cosmetic formulators spend a lot of time just doing trial and error, making formulas and trying them out. Changing little things about the formula causes big changes. Good Housekeeping did a test with 10 shampoo and conditioner pairings. Some had sulfates and some didn’t. The set that stripped hair dye the least had sulfates – it was Tresemme’s Keratin Smooth Color set. Formulators know that people who go for sulfate free want a gentler shampoo so that's what they aim for when making the formulation. They know there’s all these widespread myths about sulfates being harsh – they’ve been around since the 90s. Adding sulfates doesn't mean it will strip more. There’s a good chance that if you grab a random shampoo with sulfates, and a random shampoo without sulfates, the one with sulfates will clean better because of product design and that's how they were formulated. It’s not because just adding sulfates automatically makes shampoos strip more. They might have also added other ingredients to make the hair feel cleaner. How well it foams doesn't tell you how well it cleans. How well something foams depends on how a formula interacts with air and water to stabilise a thin stretched out film of water. Cleaning is about how it interacts with oil and dirt. But if something doesn’t foam when we use it, we tend to feel it isn’t cleaning well. It’s just a psychological thing. How well a shampoo cleans is complicated. Bottom line: Sulfate-free and sulfate-containing don’t really mean much. How well a shampoo cleans is too complicated to predict that easily. It’s much more useful to look at what the shampoo is telling you. If it says “clarifying” it’s a shampoo designed to clean your hair better, if it says “colour protection”, it can have sulfates and still strip dye less. It’s also really useful to look at reviews from people with similar hair to you and try a sample before buying.

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curlyhair
Curly Hair curlygirl 1 year ago 100%
Mell's Master List by Manes by Mell https://youtu.be/2O-UDYUMGaY

Prep, Style, Finish - Prep: Leave-in conditioner, leave-in treatment, serums, primers - Style: products (mousse, foams, creams, custards, gels, pomades, hairsprays), techniques - Finish: hair oil, serum, hairspray, texture spray Rule of thumb: the amount of product you apply is how much hair is on your hair (density), cup your hair (ok symbol) and that is how much you should apply but if you have shorter/longer hair you will need to adjust If a product is thicker, start less and work up. Damp styling: quicker dry time, more volume, less clumping Brush product through to evenly distribute it throughout hair When you wring your hair, you can see how much is in there. Don't drown it in product (becomes white). Apply evenly root to tip. Keep spray bottle with water in hand Section hair for the amount of volume you want. Mell sections hair in two, a bottom and top section. Style 90 degrees off scalp (half base) and in vertical sections. If hair is healthy with good elasticity then brushes are a good way to define curls Ribbon technique: using tension while brushing by sandwiching hair between brush and hands. Should not hurt or pull. It will look straight but curls will bounce back, you can scrunch to encourage bounce back. Gels give longevity but sometimes brushing it through makes it stringy and crispy. So apply it after brush styling, smoothing down /glazing (praying hands) Make sure hair is evenly wet from root to tip. Rewet top section after doing bottom section. If you like side parting, style top with v back method (dividing sections into V shapes). If section is very large, brick laying can be done (doing a V section and then a straight/horizontal section, and then V again, etc.) Smaller sections if hair is more coily, larger sections if hair is more wavy. And then finger coil or brush back bangs If your towel is more damp then dry, it will absorb more water like a sponge. Squish out extra water with towel, be gentle. Diffusing: When you scrunch diffuse you are disturbing the curl pattern, curls have not set yet, encouraging a lot of shrinkage (maybe too much), and drying out the ends faster than the roots so roots will be frizzy and wet. Instead hover diffuse. Once there is a cast, then you can scrunch with the blow dryer. If hair is cold it is still damp. Once hair is fully dry, then add the finishing products like hair oil, serum, hairspray or texture spray. Then you can smooth out the gel cast and separate any clumps to add volume

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Curly Hair curlygirl 1 year ago 100%
Anyone have favorite lightweight lines/products?

I have fine hair and am looking into trying more products. I'm a bit of a product junkie, always looking for a product that performs better than my current ones.

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Curly Hair curlygirl 1 year ago 100%
Busting hair care myths! Build-up, silicones and more from Lab Muffin Beauty Science https://youtu.be/ri_SqZVthaU

- Scrape test will show you all the buildup on your hair Premise: scraping hair with scissors will show if there is "buildup" on the hair from silicone. Experiment: wash two samples of hair twice each with a clarifying shampoo and use a conditioner with silicone on one sample and nothing to the other. Both strands were then scraped with scissors. Result: lots of white residue came off the silicone treated hair and the sample with no conditioner. The white residue is actually your cuticles being shredded and this act is super damaging to your strands. - Drug store products buildup on hair, premium products don't All conditioning products leave something behind to plug up the gaps and weaker spots in hair. Hair gets damaged everyday by brushing, washing, sun exposure, hair drying, straightening, and possibly bleach if you use it. So the hair strands initially grow out resistant with flat cuticles (not damaged) then become strands with raised cuticles with holes and gaps in them (damaged). To make the rough hair that has been damaged feel smooth again, conditioners plug up the gaps and some penetrate further inside the hair to make it smoother and stronger. When hair is wet it gets negatively charged, the positive charge from cationic conditioners stick to the hair and reduces static and makes it smoother. Other conditioning ingredients include polyquaternium polymers, hydrolysed proteins, oils, and silicones. They work the same whether they're in luxury products or drugstore products. - Product is bad if it weighs down hair There are three main factors that determines how much conditioning ingredients will stick to your hair: what the ingredient is, how it's used on your hair (how you use it, how much is in the product, the formula), and what your hair is like. Don't use corase resistant products on fine porous hair, that will cause it to be greasy and stick together. It's like how a product for dry skin might be awful on oily skin. - All silicones are the same If you have enough silicone with a positive charge on your hair, extra silicones won't stick on anymore. Silicones can be heavier or lighter depending on its structure but still have the same name - e.g. dimethicone is a polymer that can be lots of different lengths and have different properties. Longer chains are heavier and thicker, shorter chains are more lightweight and spread more easily. There are lots of different grades, these grades do not mean higher and lower qualities.There's thousands of silicones. Just because you have a bad experience with one silicone doesn't mean that all silicones will react that way. - What are your thoughts on these myths?

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Curly Hair RBWells 1 year ago 100%
Smooth out the crunch

So sometimes my hair looks about how I want it, and I don't really want to disrupt it by scrunching. In this example I was happy with the crunchy result in terms of shape but IRL it did look kinda stringy. So instead of flipping and squishing it to break the cast, or leaving it alone to naturally soften, praying hands smoothed down the hair and rub at the roots released just enough of the stiffness without inducing more disorder than I was ready for. Just a general tip - even though the phrase is "scrunch out the crunch" you can twist out the crunch or smooth out the crunch to leave the ends more defined and a calmer look. (ETA: also shows that wavy hair can 'curl' from the root - that was one of the bizarre claims I saw on r/curlyhair, that curls always start at roots and waves always have straight roots. This person was classifying someone I'd have called at 3b as wavy because her curls started partway down the hair. Discussion got oddly heated. Root curl is independent of curl shape for sure.) ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/0ce7acc7-cdd6-4c44-a204-05f2fd592f05.jpeg)

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Curly Hair curlygirl 1 year ago 100%
Don't Waste Time Styling Tips by Manes by Mell https://youtu.be/TWF8jh0HURQ

>Don't use deep conditioner before shampoo. Use something cheap if you do because it is a waste. You should instead do an oil treatment. >Don't cowash if you are not washing more than 2 times a week >Smooth down conditioner rather than scrunching it in >Add water when detangling to help with slip >Deep condition when needed (mostly it is meant for not healthy hair) >Curl training while doing a treatment does not work, waste of time >Don't leave deep conditioner in for more than 30 minutes, waste of time >Use products for your texture and porosity >Prep with primer or leave in conditioner and then style with gel or foam, etc. >Save scrunching for the end >Add water (with spray bottle) before adding each product > Dry hair with (micro fiber) towel gently before air drying or diffusing, especially in high humidity

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Curly Hair curlygirl 1 year ago 100%
Hair gets everywhere!

![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/b4b15b66-b3dc-4045-b02e-f3f3264faa3b.jpeg) ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/8bca22c2-10c0-4770-8ecd-1e6b6e242eea.jpeg) ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/19037ae6-40d2-4ead-9722-cfe45d9f2699.jpeg) ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/68a8131b-07fa-440e-a492-b24c678a9217.jpeg) Taken from: https://www.instagram.com/reel/Cq6AyDgIVk1

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Curly Hair curlygirl 1 year ago 50%
Humidity Resistant Ingredients Part II @welshiecurlgirl

![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/ed3d3a48-871f-439f-a2fb-0580ded91cf5.jpeg) ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/a7ba59b4-b8cc-4a05-947b-1d8f234d6e7e.jpeg) ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/347d95aa-3ea6-4118-a7c3-0f7cdd8327b1.jpeg) ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/5d17b252-d67a-4f15-b511-8b8e32383070.jpeg) ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/31ab66cd-560f-4b9d-a13e-4774da4833b6.jpeg) ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/66a134dc-7022-4cdd-943a-f28f4e082ccd.jpeg) Taken from: https://www.instagram.com/p/CtUo5W1I1OV https://www.instagram.com/p/CtpOrbbLKMD

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Curly Hair curlygirl 1 year ago 83%
Porosity, Image Credit: Chantal McRae

>How porous or absorbent your hair is has a lot to do with how it looks and can help you decide what to use on your hair to help it look it’s best. A porosity is a hole or a gap – an opening. >Hair which is porous [aka high porosity] will take on water and other chemicals easily because of all the tiny openings in the cuticle. Water gets in and out easily. >Hair which is not very porous [aka low porosity] repels water and most other fluids and this is a good thing. Water doesn't get in or out easily. >It's fairly common to have hair that is porous on the ends, but not at the roots. >What causes porosity? >Weathering of hair, mechanical stress [combing, especially brushing, tieing up, rubbing, etc.], wetting and drying, shampooing, chemical treatments, and physical structure of hair. If your hair has waves, curls or (especially) kinks (and wavy hair can be kinky hair too), it is likely to have areas on the strand which are narrow, flattened, twisted or otherwise not as strong. Even the “cuticle armor” cannot protect these areas adequately. These are prone to breakage and damage and therefore become porous easily. Wavy and curly hair is also more prone to damage from daily life simply because it has bends in it. >How to Determine Your Hair's Porosity: >This is something you learn from studying your hair by running your fingers over a hair strand, observing shine or reflectivity, how hydrated your hair feels on a daily basis, and your hair's response to products. >Normal-porous hair: It shines, maybe not quite as much as not-porous hair. It perms and takes color as expected. Your hair can be normal-porous even if you use some heat on your hair (low-heat diffusers). Normal-porous hair does not become oily-looking with reasonable amounts of conditioners or oils. Normal-porous hair may have times when it feels a bit dry, or not dry at all and it is easy to make it feel "not dry" and soft with hair conditioner and gentle care. You perceive some "soaking in" of hair products. You probably have had some exposure to the full sun, possibly chlorinated swimming pools. Your hair may be not-porous near the roots and normal-porous further down and therefore respond differently to conditioners in those two areas, which is why many people condition their hair from the ears, down. If you run your fingers up and down an individual hair, it feels mostly smooth. This normal-porous hair has cuticle scales which look like shingles on a roof. They overlap and don't stick up much. >Porous hair: If you run your fingers up and down a hair strand, it may feel bumpy and uneven due to kinking, or to damage. Quite porous hair does not shine much and though it may have some gloss, it's not "reflective" or brightly shiny. It will seem to absorb hair products of any kind, tends to feel dry most of the time and you have a difficult time getting it to feel soft and pliable. Porous hair usually takes on dye, permanent waves and chemical straightening quickly. And loses dye quickly. Porous hair loses moisture easily. >Maintain Porosity: >Avoid too much handling, tight ponytail holders, excess heat (curling or straightening irons, blowdryers without a diffuser), prolonged exposure to sunlight, chemical treatments (permanent waves or chemical relaxers), and bleaching or permanent haircoloring. Don’t rub your hair roughly with towels, tie it up tightly every day, use metal barrettes with sharp edges. Avoid brushing or combing vigorously and with force. Do detangle with care, don’t wash hair every day, use dilute shampoos or mild shampoos. Taken from: https://science-yhairblog.blogspot.com/2011/09/porosity-in-hair.html https://science-yhairblog.blogspot.com/2012/06/hair-porosity-how-to-measure-sort-of.html

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Curly Hair curlygirl 1 year ago 85%
Hard Water 101 @welshiecurlgirl

![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/3d11d2b0-d5ce-4bf9-af5b-9d83f62e568a.jpeg) ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/4c2704b8-b943-4000-a8ef-386af7eb02a3.jpeg) ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/4d8ce0cc-493f-4581-a9c7-036647914c69.jpeg) ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/f13909b2-28b9-44e1-a2b9-04a89289615e.jpeg) ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/be2aab9a-b13a-4341-b1b5-984ba8ce0b97.jpeg) I recommend using a chelating shampoo instead of the listed alternatives, it is easy to mess up hair if you don't have the proper pH. A chelating shampoo will be the proper pH and is effective. Taken from: https://www.instagram.com/p/CkZHgkDIM-6 The [showerstik](https://watersticks.com/showerstick/) is the only shower head that can actually filter out the minerals that I know of, regular shower heads can help remove chlorine but will not make water soft. Hardness prevents soap from lathering by causing the development of an insoluble curdy precipitate in the water; hardness typically causes the buildup of hardness scale (such as seen in cooking pans). Dissolved calcium and magnesium salts are primarily responsible for most scaling in pipes and water heaters and cause numerous problems in laundry, kitchen, and bath. Symptoms of Hard Water include: - Stiff, dingy laundry - Mineral deposits on dishes and glassware - High soap usage & need for fabric softeners - Extra work to remove soap curd on bathtubs & shower stalls - High energy costs, possibly due to scale build-up in pipes and on appliances - Scale build up in sinks, tubs, faucets & appliances Taken from: https://wqa.org/Learn-About-Water/Perceptible-Issues/Scale-Deposits/ Map of Hard Water in the USA ([USGS](https://www.usgs.gov/media/images/map-water-hardness-united-states)): ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/ec11d662-88ab-44da-8ca8-2a5d8d998cc8.jpeg) General guidelines for classification of waters are: - 0 to 60 mg/L (milligrams per liter) as calcium carbonate is classified as soft - 61 to 120 mg/L as moderately hard - 121 to 180 mg/L as hard - More than 180 mg/L as very hard. Taken from: https://www.usgs.gov/special-topics/water-science-school/science/hardness-water#overview

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Curly Hair RBWells 1 year ago 100%
One thing I love about wavy hair

The enormous ponytail! I noticed it in a zoom call for work, it was a big round puff in the camera but when I got a better view it's just waves on waves. ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/80f4ef59-fb7f-4ba0-b58e-8de4acd5b861.jpeg)

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Curly Hair bigtonyrocks 1 year ago 100%
Confused on protein and moisture

My hair is fine, 2b/c, High porosity hair. It doesn’t curl for the first couple inches, but idk if that’s because of genetics or something I’m doing wrong. Either way, I have symptoms of not having enough of either protein or moisture. It’s dry and frizzy, and sometimes feels like hay, but also breaks easily and is stringy when it’s wet. All I do is shampoo and condition with shea moistures light blue hydrate and repair. I scrunch it damp and then diffuse on cool for a little but not fully dry. I need ideas for products, and I’m open for deep conditioners or hair masks or something, but I like to get out the door and try not to spend long styling it.

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Curly Hair curlygirl 1 year ago 100%
5 Curly hair tips @cuethecurl

I just want to preface this one by saying everyone's hair is different, you may need to clarify more often or shampoo more often or maybe your hair is too fine to deep condition, etc. These are just general tips and not rules you have to follow. I think 4 and 5 apply to everyone better. ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/3d9d556b-2b73-4680-896f-1a7a0a77237d.jpeg) ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/3da736ab-97d5-4eb3-9d5f-7cd6744f94a6.jpeg) ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/8280115b-9ae6-4aa9-8f97-3cccaf198f42.jpeg) ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/f8c23298-49a3-4919-b110-0ac3df6908c0.jpeg) ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/c1ac333a-004f-4cf1-a8c3-73bd5381749c.jpeg) Taken from: https://www.instagram.com/p/CqX6w7susJg

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Curly Hair curlygirl 1 year ago 33%
How does k18 work? @sciencemeetscosmetics

![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/f3503c81-9683-4250-a0b7-d123f6470e11.jpeg) ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/f770436c-2cf5-4d63-a48c-9b7f3860f49e.jpeg) ![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/7cc85972-638f-4b71-8d81-ffb44f2499ce.jpeg) >A few months ago I posted about the benefits of peptides in hair products. >The unfortunate of that post was that the peptides studied in the research I cited where all ‘custom-made’ and hard to find in a product. But the papers that I cited regarding the impressive results of peptides all had prof. Artur Cavaco-Paulo as the research leader. >Now I came across the K18 peptide repair crème, and guess who is one of the inventors? Prof. Artur Cavaco-Paulo! >☝️To understand this product we first need to discuss standard conditioning and protein products. >Hair mainly consists of protein, in particular keratin. Heat styling, bleaching etc. damage the keratin. Hair is dead and can’t repair the damaged keratin. >Conditioning agents attach to the outer layer of the hair and smoothen the surface but the inner keratin layers responsible for the strength of the hair are not repaired. Besides, they temporarily attach to the surface and are removed by the next wash >Most proteins works like standard conditioning agents. These proteins temporarily attach to the outer layer. Only low molecular weight peptides (hydrolysed proteins) and amino acids can diffuse into the hair cortex and may interact with the damaged keratin. >☝️Read well the word MAY because this is exactly what the K18 product is changing to will! >The hair keratin (protein) is made out of strings of amino acids (amino acids are the body’s basic building blocks). But the order of those amino acids is very specific and if you want a peptide (also chains of amino acids but smaller chains than protein) to bind to this specific order you need to unravel the sequence of the hair keratin and design the ‘perfect’ peptide to bind to it. >And this is what the inventors of the K18 peptide did, they spent many years to find and design the unique combination which has the highest affinity and interaction with the hair keratin and the ability to restrengthen the hair (from the inside, swipe right). >☝️If you have non damaged hair you will see less results with this product, but slightly damaged? Try it 🤗 >❓Have you already tried @k18hair ? Taken from: https://www.instagram.com/p/CO0TKxGHB0G

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