That's a good idea! I've been wanting to try to make my hair straighter, every once in a while, so I'll try this soon!
Sissy - When you let your hair air dry do you comb it while wet before letting it dry?
Soft hair that is nice to sit on - now I'm bragging!
oh in my family they call it a dubi (I don't know how to spell it but its pronounced doobie) I've never tried it before. but I will try it instead of straightening my hair with a straightening iron. I have really think hair so I'm pretty sure it'll work. after I wash my hair whenever we get hot water back in the house (a pipe broke in the basement today) I'm going to give it a try and if it works out well I'll post pics.
but then again, now that I think about it, I have no bobby pins, I'll try to do it without and just wrap a scarf around it
really thin* hair (I can't edit my post yet, sorry)
Here's my attempt at it:
After wrapping:
Normal day:
After I took it out from being wrapped, it was frizzy and poofy (actually poofier than this picture shows), so it doesn't seem to work for me. If I was going to straighten my hair with a flat iron, though, this might be worth doing to make my hair easier to work through.
Soft hair that is nice to sit on - now I'm bragging!
My mother taught me something very similar, but instead of pins she used to use the foot part of a cut pantyhose.
But the pins do look easier than the pantyhose - it's hard to get all of your hair in if you don't have anything to help hold them while you get the tight-ish pantyhose on.
Results on my hair were meh... But it's been years since I've trying wrapping my hair like that, and we usually used it in combination with a blow drier - makes the whole thing faster.
Oh! And my mother used to wrap the hair in one direction, and after a while, she'd redo it in the other direction.
The pin method does look easier, but I thought I'd write about another alternative, too.
Hey,
I do a less fancy form of a crown wrap to make my hair wavey. I am a uber curly hair!
1. Form an all in ponytail with the index finger and thumb of one hand.
2. With the other hand gently grip the hair and twist it round until you reach near the tips (the hair should remain together when you remove your index finger and thumb).
3. Bring your twisted hair round itself.
4. Then push the end through the loop and pull until loop tightens around your own hair.
5. If you have a lot of ends left over either redo steps 1-4, or redo step 4 on its own until the tips disapear.
This is great for keeping hair out of your face, allowing oil to sink in and for making curly hair straighter. I usually go to work with my hair in one big plait (secured only at the end with a ribbon plaited in and tied at the end) then I do steps 3-5.
HENNAHEAD&RIBBON-ADDICT
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