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brave
April 16th, 2012, 11:26 PM
Where is a good place to buy a decent wide-tooth horn comb? Can you use these while your hair is wet, or will it kill it like it does a wooden comb? I'd rather not shell out the money and then have it shatter on me.

Thanks!

sfgirl
April 16th, 2012, 11:40 PM
Sorry I can't be more help. I finger comb when it's wet so I can be more gentle so I don't know. :(

Roscata
April 17th, 2012, 12:16 AM
I got mine on amazon, it's by Hair Art (http://www.amazon.com/Hair-Art-Bone-Comb-Teeth/dp/B002RU1CV2/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1334643324&sr=8-1) but Hair Sense (http://hairsense.com/)is also a good brand.

Your hair is at it's weakest when it's wet. My suggestion is don't detangle, comb or brush it while it's wet. BUT if you absolutely have to, sfgirl is right, finger combing is your safest option, just make sure you pull each knot gently apart by hand if you find one.

ETA: Another alternative is combing it while you have conditioner in it and pre-wash combing as well. That should make it easier for you.

I can't say either way on the strength of the bone comb versus the wooden comb. My hair doesn't tangle much. I did read about one coarse, thick haired lady that broke a hair sense comb on her first detangling, so they may not be for you.

Good luck! :)

Lalital
April 17th, 2012, 04:35 AM
I have a wide toothed yak horn comb and I absolutely love it. In comparison to all other materials, it is the smoothest and most like human hair itself with the least static and drag. It's my favourite hair tool. I got it from e-bay and paid $5. It was going for $6 but had a 'make an offer' option so I decided I wanted to pay $5-no probs. Check it out and just make sure you look closely at the pictures and any combs have no rough edges between the teeth because they are hand-carved.
I comb my hair before I wash to minimise tangles in wet hair and do not comb it wet. When it is dry, my horn comb does a good job of detangling.

brave
April 17th, 2012, 08:40 AM
I don't need to fully comb my wet hair so much as "arrange" it. Bangs need combing though, when wet, unless I want to look terrifying.

rock007junkie
April 17th, 2012, 08:49 AM
I mostly finger detangle but I also use this comb. It detangles without pulling my hair. I've noticed a significant decrease of shedded hairs with it....and it's so cheap! I just use the orange one (wider)

http://www.curlmart.com/product/cricket-ultraclean-big-time-comb/

littlestarface
April 17th, 2012, 09:02 AM
I have a horn comb and I never use it,just a waste of money if you ask me, I like the little comb that comes with the hair scissor kit more better or even my tangle teaser I like using more instead of my horn comb.

Honeyfall
April 17th, 2012, 09:04 AM
I have a horn comb and I quite like it, but I don't think you're supposed to use them on wet hair. To be honest I do sometimes anyway and I haven't had a problem with it so far. I can't imagine it breaking, it seems to be pretty solidly made. I would highly recommend one, personally.

auburntressed
April 26th, 2012, 05:51 PM
I got mine on amazon, it's by Hair Art (http://www.amazon.com/Hair-Art-Bone-Comb-Teeth/dp/B002RU1CV2/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1334643324&sr=8-1) but Hair Sense (http://hairsense.com/)is also a good brand.
Has anyone here used one of those bone combs from hairsense? My horn comb snapped in half, so I'm looking for a replacement. The resin they said their combs are made of I find intriguing, but I'd like to know how it compares to horn.

PraiseCheeses
April 26th, 2012, 06:34 PM
Has anyone here used one of those bone combs from hairsense? My horn comb snapped in half, so I'm looking for a replacement. The resin they said their combs are made of I find intriguing, but I'd like to know how it compares to horn.


I have three of the Hairsense combs: the Palm Pic, the wide-tooth detangling rake, and the dense-tooth detangler "for long, fine hair." Be prepared to do a lot of sanding if you get one; there are visible (and tangible) saw marks even though there aren't seams. I quite like the combs now that they are sanded and smooth, but I was disappointed that they had to be sanded at all.

I love the wide-tooth combs; they glide through my hair much more easily than my fingers, and I use them the most. I don't use the dense-tooth comb very much because I couldn't sand between the teeth and I'm scared it'll shred my fine hair. :eek: As far as fine-tooth combs go, I love love love the best my leaf-shaped horn comb from quecraft on etsy. It feels much smoother than the dense-tooth comb from Hairsense.... and it's purty. :cloud9: