Wednesday, December 31, 2008

My Hair in 2008

As 2009 approaches, I thought I'd take a few minutes to reflect on changes in my life in 2008. One of the biggest changes in my personal life was my change in hair routine.

In the beginning of 2008, I was a senior in highschool anxiously awaiting the end of IB (a special program that rigorously prepares gifted high school students for college and beyond) and the dreaded time when college acceptance and rejection letters go out. I was overworked, tired, but still happy. I was in a very good relationship (still am) and that gave me great happiness. He's an incredibly supportive guy and he always tells me I look gorgeous no matter what I actually look like.

Even though I was pretty happy with my love life and pretty optimistic about my school life and my chances with the colleges I had applied to, I was very unhappy with my hair. I never liked it curly. The only reason I stopped flatironing in 2007 was because I knew that it wasn't good that I could pick any random strand of hair and odds were, it ended in at least one split end (sometimes it was a split end that had it's own split ends).

My solution from January through October was to just deal with the fact that I had horrible curly hair. The people around me insisted it was pretty, but I knew that undefined frizz was not pretty by any scale. I had an extreme simple routine: shampoo, conditioner, leave in. I thought gels and creme would just make my hair greasy, since I had to shampoo every day to get rid of the greasy scalp.

The ponytail was my best friend. I figured that highlighting my big forehead was ok if it meant that the frizz was out of my face and out of view (at least from one angle).

I spend a good summer working as an assistant manager at a local pool, treating my hair to chlorine and sun. Those two things changed it a few shades lighter just like every other summer I've ever lived.

So coming into school this fall I had naturally light brown, undefined curly frizz hair. I turned into one of those people who you become surprised to see them with their hair down.

Then in October, I was anticipating my much needed haircut. Maybe this could be the haircut that would make my hair look amazing somehow. I looked online for some pictures of curly hair cuts, but to my dismay there were hardly any to be found using google images. So I did a google search for "curly hair". Then everything changed

I found naturallycurly.com, started a thread asking how I should get my hair cut, and then people asked me if I was "CG". And the rest is history.

I think it's really cool that if I compare my hair and even just my outlook on my hair from the beginning of 2008 to the beginning of 2009, I find that they've both changed completely. I love my hair now. CG has completely transformed it. I love buying new products to experiment because I know that even if those products don't work just the way I want them to, my hair will still look amazing if I go back to my tried and true KCCC routine. I love that I don't have to wash everyday, and that I know that I don't really have an oily scalp. I love that I get compliments and looks and questions from total strangers. I love that I have a great before/after set of pictures, and I know that whenever I show them to people, they will be amazed.

2008 is by far the best year my hair has ever seen. I can't wait for 2009 because I'm reigning in the new year with new hair and new hair optimism. I want to wish all the curlies out there a happy new year, and happy curls :)

Friday, December 26, 2008

Sally's Shopping List

I got a comment on the Whole Foods list asking if I had a shopping list for Sally's Beauty. I haven't actually been to a Sally's before, but I know some of the girls on nc.com like it. With the help of naturallycurly.com and sallybeauty.com, here's my shopping list for CG products at Sally's

-Biotera (a reputedly more effective knock-off of Biolage)
-Paul Mitchell (conditioners, leave ins, etc)
-brushes (Denman, mebco, etc) for detangling
-Generic K-Pak (protein treatment)
-Lustrasilk
-Aphogee
-Naturelle's

Most people who I've seen recommend products recommend the Biotera line. I think that's the big CG reason to go to Sally's. Not all of the above lines are CG. I highly recommend reading the ingredients labels for yourself. Look for -cone, -conol, or -xana without PEG or PPG in front of them. Avoid those products!

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Whole Foods Shopping List


I know I was very excited when I found out that I had a Whole Foods that's pretty close to my school. This store is a fantastic resource for Curly Girls because it features lots of natural products that are free of sulfates and silicones at pretty reasonable prices. There are lots of things that you can order online, but you don't have to pay the shipping! I thought I'd compile of list of the things that are available at this great store.

-Kinky Curly Curling Custard...if you're lucky. Check the Kinky Curly Website to find out if your whole foods stocks Kinky Curly Products
-Giovanni products (Sulfate free poos, the leave in, and conditioners)
-Jane Carter line
-Aubrey Organics line (all natural poos and conditioners...several vegan products)
-Fruit of the Earth (aloe)
-Oils like jaboba oil, coconut oil, etc
-Pure shea butter
-Jason line
-John Masters line
-Henna
-365 conditioners
-Beauty Without Cruelty
-Burt's Bees
-Nature's Gate line
-Desert Essence Organics line
-Magick Botanicals
-Alba line
-Avalon Organics
-Lily of the Desert aloe

If you can think of anything I'm missing, please post a comment and I'll update the list :)

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Tangle Tango


I got a request on CurlTalk to do a post about tangling (or rather, detangling). That got me thinking, why does hair even tangle? What triggers tangling? Are certain hair types more prone to tangling than others? Can it be prevented? What's the best way to detangle gently?

I began researching with google, some university databases, and CurlTalk to answer my new questions. I'm going to do my best to detangle the confusion on tangles (I love cheesy puns!)

So let's start at the beginning of tangling. What is a tangle, exactly? Dictionary.com doesn't have a definition relating to hair, but it does remind us that tangle can just mean a confusing, jumbled situation. Anyone who has ever looked closely at a knot in their hair agrees that's a good definition of it. Sometimes it's hard to tell how many hairs are even stuck in that thing!

A more difficult question is how does hair get tangled? One image came to my mind when I first thought of this. Pocahontas. Standing on the cliff in the Disney movie. Wind blowing in her hair. No knots. Just smoothness. Even at a young age, I knew this was completely infeasible.

One of the biggest culprits in getting out hair into knots is wind. That's right curlies...just one more reason to hate wind. Other environmental factors like rain can also do us in for a 20 minute shower combing. These causes may not be surprising. But my searching revealed some causes which I hadn't considered before.

1) Sudden illness/health problems. Illness wreaks havoc on your body in all sorts of ways. The chemical changes that your body undergoes during immune response can actually make your hair more prone to tangling by changing the moisture levels in your hair. Your body has a higher demand for nutrients during illness, including water. It will take water wherever it can get it. This makes another reason to hydrate during sickness.

2) Clothing. It's winter and I love my sweaters. Hair rubbing against rough or bumpy fabric will cause knotting over time. This is why lots of CG ladies recommend satin pillowcases and another reason to never let terrycloth near your tresses. It seems to me that this could be a big factor in those people who say that that underlayer at the nape of the neck always gets especially tangled.

3) Damage. Damaged hair looks even worse when it's knotty. Funny enough, damage from coloring, straightening, and chemical treatments actually make hair more prone to tangling. This is because damage is essentially a wearing away of the hair shaft. According to one of my medicine textbooks, the hair shaft has certain compounds which are attracted to each other. Attraction to each other = tangled mess. So stop straightening!

So you might be glaring at the screen by now because I've told you how your hair gets knotted but haven't mentioned detangling yet. Calm down, let's jump into that.

Lucky for us CG girls, one of the only recommendations that seems to be consistent from site to site and article to article is moisture and lots of conditioning. Odds are if you're reading this, you're already doing that. So I searched curltalk and made a thread asking for some conditioners that other have found to be very detangling. I can't validate these personally as I haven't used them all, but if you're looking for some experiment fodder, here you go.

-L'oreal vive pro nutri gloss for medium to long hair that's wavy/curly
-Suave Naturals (special recognition to coconut, ocean breeze, green apple and strawberry)
-Kinky Curly Knot Today
-Giovanni Direct Leave In
-Shea Butter
-Karen's Body Beautiful: Hair Milk, Super Silky, Hair Nectar (3 different products)
-VO5 conditioners (special recognition: vanilla mint)
-Cure Care (from Sally's)
-Curl Junkie Curl Creme (styler)
-Robert Craig line
-DevaCare One Condition
-Biolage Conditioning Balm
-Regis Olive Oil Conditioner
-Abba Pure and Gentle
-Jessicurl Too Shea
-John Masters Citrus/Neroli
-Curl Junkie Hibiscus & Banana deep fix
-Karen's Body Beautiful Luscious Locks Hair Mask
-Coconut Oil


Now that you've got some product ideas for detangling, on to techniques.

Lorraine Massey recommends finger combing only because it's very gentle. Lots of us have discovered that we need a little bit more help. Wide toothed combs are very gentle, and the Denman line of brushes (D3 and D4) have also helped lots of curlies. Only comb your hair when wet. Dry combing can actually make your hair more tangled because when you separate dry strands, you're increasing the potential eergy of the molecules in the hair shaft that like to stick together; and so they like to come back together. This means you're basically separating one tangle to create a new one. Water and conditioner can serve as great buffers in this process, so it makes more sense to comb your hair out only when wet and well conditioned.

Another thing I've read in several places is to use jaboba oil (either on wet or dry hair) to give good slip.

Working in sections helps me greatly. I never ever try to run the entire comb through my hair from root to tip on the first go. I start maybe 1 inch from the end of the length and detangle down there all around my hair. Then I move up another inch, and work in sections like that until I'm up to the root and can run the comb through without resistance.

Some people have reported on curltalk that combing in a direction that's not the direction that the hair grows in (ie combing upside down) increases tangles.

I hope that those of you suffering from tangles have found at least one new bit of information in this post that may help you combat the knots. The holidays are a great time to do some experimenting ;)

Sunday, December 14, 2008

Laura Lee's All In One Guide to Going CG: Now Revised and Updated!

There are plenty of fantastic explanatory articles and such out there that will introduce you to the Curly Girl method of getting soft, frizz free, healthy curls. However, when I was new to the routine, I found that all that great information is spread out across the web! Definitely a little overwhelming to try and track down. So I thought that I would do my best to bring everything that I know about getting started on the method to one place.

So perhaps you were on naturallycurly.com, the de facto headquarters of the method and an absolute treasure trove of information, and you just wanted some product recommendations or a cut that would help you tame your curly hair. Maybe you heard about the Curly Girl method from a friend or coworker. Maybe you eagerly looked at the WikiHow article on how to follow the method or went to your library or bookstore to pick up the book that inspired it all.

No matter how you found out about the Curly Girl method, I guarantee that once you found out about it, you had some mixed feelings. You heard about not shampooing and no silicones and plopping and pixiecurling and sulfates and surfactants and probably got a little overwhelmed unless you happen to have a degree in chemistry.

I want to straighten everything out in one place. Read on, and perhaps you'll find out that the Curly Girl method is exactly what you and your curls have been looking for.

WHAT DOES CG MEAN? WHO CAME UP WITH IT?
"CG" is the abbreviation for the Curly Girl method of caring for curly hair. It was developed by Lorraine Massey, owner of Devachan Salon in New York City. She's considered one of the foremost experts in curly hair care.

WHAT DOES THE METHOD DO TO YOUR HAIR?
CG does not work for everyone, but when it does work, the results are absolutely startling. Check out the Before and After thread on the CurlTalk forum on naturallycurly.com. Many find that when they follow the CG method, their once frizzy, dry damaged curls transform into well hydrated, glossy, soft, bouncy curls that are every bit as healthy as they look.

THE SCIENCE BEHIND CURLY GIRL
Here is why the method works so well. It is completely scientifically based.

Most commercial shampoos contain sulfates. Check the ingredient label on your shampoo bottle. Odds are, it contains something like "Sodium laureth sulfate," "Sodium laurel sulfate," or "ammonium laurel sulfate." Perhaps you already knew this.

What you probably don't realize is that if you check the ingredients list on your favorite dish detergent, odds are it also contains one of those ingredients very high on the list.

That's right. One of the primary ingredients in your shampoo is the same as one of the primary ingredients that is in your dish detergent. The same stuff you are putting in your hair is the same stuff you're using to scrub the meatloaf off the dinnerware.

A fun comparison: Here is the shampoo I used before CG, next to a bottle of the dish detergent I use.
Below is a comparison of their ingredient labels. You'll see the first two ingredients are exactly the same. These two ingredients make up most of the product.

So why would they put dish detergent ingredients in shampoo? It's simple: sulfates are surfactants. Surfactants are molecules that can reduce tension between oil and water. To put it simple: they are highly effective grease fighters. They can cut through oil and grime and leave the things they touch oil-free.

So now maybe you're thinking, well if it cuts grease, I suppose it's ok for my hair. Wrong. And here's why.

Curly hair is fundamentally different from straight hair. Ever wonder why your friends with straight hair have glossy, shiny hair, while yours is dull and frizzy? Biologically speaking, straight hair is naturally better moisturized. Straight-haired people have a head start on us curlies in terms of moisture! This is because the oil secreted by the sebaceous glands in your scalp can't travel down your spirals as well as it can for straight hair. The results? Straight hair looks glossy and healthy, while curly hair looks dry and frizzy, often with an oily scalp to boot.

Not fair, right? Well it gets worse. Curly hair is also more porous than straight hair. This means that there are more tiny holes in the cuticle layer of your hair strands. Where does that leave you? Those harsh sulfates that are in your shampoos (and dish detergent!) get into those little holes. It's very difficult to get them out. That means that not only are the sulfates stripping your hair of nearly all of its natural oil that it so desperately needs (since it doesn't get as much from the scalp as it should), but the sulfate molecules are actually getting into your hair strands and causing long-term damage.

The overall result of using sulfate-based shampoos to clean curly hair is that your hair looks dull and dry because it is completely starved for oil and moisture, while those with straight-hair can use sulfates and still look well moisturized because they have a moisture head start and the sulfates have a harder time penetrating the hair shaft.

How can we fix this problem?

HOW CAN YOU GET YOUR HAIR CLEAN WITHOUT DESTROYING IT WITH SULFATES?
There's really good news for curlies. We can simply not shampoo our hair. We still wash it and it still gets clean. It doesn't smell and your scalp won't be oily.

How?

By replacing your harsh sulfate-based shampoo with a gentle conditioner wash, or a co-wash as the ladies and gents of naturallycurly.com call it.

HOW DOES CONDITIONER GET YOUR HAIR CLEAN?
Conditioners contain surfactants, just like shampoo. The difference is that the surfactants in conditioners are not anywhere near as harsh and drying on your hair as sulfate surfactants are. These gentle "secondary surfactants" will lift off dirt, oil, and grime from your hair and scalp and leave them perfectly clean with the use of manual friction. Scrub your scalp and hair with conditioner, and it will get clean.

SO IF GENTLE SURFACTANTS CLEAN YOUR HAIR, WHY DO SHAMPOOS USE SULFATES IN THE FIRST PLACE?
As I've said, sulfates are very harsh surfactants that are used because they are grease cutters. The reason that shampoo companies put sulfates in their shampoos instead of using more gentle cleansers is that most hair products that you use to condition and style your hair contain molecules called silicones.

Silicones are all around you. They are in cookware, doctor's offices, lubricants, electronics, insulation, and strangely enough, hair care products. One of the most intrinsic properties of silicones is that they are not water soluble. That means that if you put silicones (there is a wide variety of different types) in water, they will not dissolve.

Silicones are used in hair products because they coat the cuticle of the hair, making the layers that compose the cuticle lay flat against the hair shaft. This means that silicones can be effective quick fixes for frizz and flyaways.

WHY ARE SILICONES BAD?
Solving frizz seems like a good thing, right? So why are silicones bad?

They do not dissolve in water. Therefore, just stepping in your shower will not get rid of them. You need to use a sulfate to remove them completely. It's an endless cycle of damage. You wash with sulfates, use silicone to calm the cuticle because the sulfates are wreaking havoc, then you need to wash with sulfates to get rid of the silicone.

If you simply try to cut out sulfates without cutting silicones, you can do some damage to your hair. The silicones, which have sealed your cuticle shut, will literally suffocate your hair shaft and could result in build up (greasy gunk) and even such extremes as hair loss if you continue to fail to remove the silicone.

ELIMINATE SILICONES SO YOU CAN ELIMINATE SULFATES
Fortunately, there are lots of products for conditioning and styling curly hair that are sulfate free and silicone free.

This is the basis of the CG method. Get rid of sulfates and silicones, moisturize your curls, and see results.

THERE IS NO WAY I CAN WASH MY HAIR WITH CONDITIONER! IT'S TO GREASY!
Odds are, you're wrong. There are relatively few people who truly have naturally oily scalps to the point where their hair is truly greasy without frequent sulfate cleansing.

The reason that many curly haired people believe that they must wash their hair with shampoo everyday is that their scalps are crying out for help. Your scalp knows that it needs to produce oil to keep the hair healthy. The problem for most curlies is that the scalp is producing too much oil.

Why are your glands making too much oil? Once again, the answer lies in sulfates. When your hair is completely stripped of its natural oils by sulfates each and every day, your scalp goes into hyperactive mode. Your cells flip on a switch that says, "Help! The hair has no oil!" and your glands dutifully respond, producing gobs of oil to compensate. Your glands don't realize that all of the extra oil they put so much effort into making is just going to be stripped again anyway the next time you shampoo.

HOW DO YOU START CG?
Before you do anything else, you must do one last wash with a sulfate-based shampoo to completely cleanse your hair of any silicones. If you skip this step, you'll end up with gunky buildup. This step is critical.

After you've washed your hair with a sulfate shampoo for the last time, it's time to do your first cowash. This can be done in the same shower that you do your last sulfate wash in, or you can wait. If you wait however, just remember that you can't put any silicones into your hair.

HOW CAN YOU TELL IF A PRODUCT IS CG FRIENDLY?
You read the ingredients label of course! Silicones are very easy to spot with practice. A silicone ingredient with end with -cone, -conol, or -xane. Examples include: dimethicone, dimethiconol, amodimethicone, cyclomethicone, cyclopentasiloxane, and trimethicone. None of these are water soluble, so you cannot use them with the CG method.

Make sure you don't confuse silicones with preservatives, which frequently end in -one (rather than -cone). Methylchloroisothiazolinone, while a mouthful, is a water soluble preservative, and is perfectly CG friendly.

Another little complexity about silicones is that scientists can modify their structure to make them water soluble. These cones are CG friendly, but some people choose to avoid them for the sake of being totally silicone free. They can be removed with cowashing, however. If a silicone ingredient (-cone, -conol, or -xane) is prefaced with PEG or PPG, it is water soluble. So PEG-12 Dimethicone is water soluble, and CG friendly.

Sum up: CG products will be silicone free conditioners, stylers, creams, gels, pomades, sprays, etc. The way to spot a cone is to look for -cone, -conol, or -xane. If there isnt a PEG- or PPG- in front of that cone, it isn't water soluble, and therefore isn't CG friendly.

I DID MY LAST SULFATE SHAMPOO AND I'M READY TO COWASH. NOW WHAT?
Pick a light, silicone free conditioner. The most popular and readily available conditioners to cowash are the Suave Naturals conditioners (many like Suave Naturals Coconut) and the VO5 conditioners (these are lighter than the Suave line). There are plenty of other options, but these are good starter cowashes because they are cheap and easy to obtain.

Here's how to cowash. Take a quarter sized puddle of the conditioner and use the pads of your fingertips (not your nails) and scrub your scalp just as you would have done with shampoo. If you need more conditioner, use it. The amount each person will need will vary. If your hair feels dry, use more. If your hair soaks it all up, use more. Don't be afraid of it. I use 2-4 puddles per wash. The key is to really scrub. Scrub until your arms are tired. Scrub all over your entire scalp. Enjoy the massage!

After you've scrubbed your whole scalp with conditioner, take another small puddle and scrub the length like you would with shampoo.

When you rinse it out, keep scrubbing. Scrubbing while rinsing ensures that all the grime and oil is being lifted and carried away.

Now you've cowashed and your hair is clean but moisturized!

AFTER COWASHING, NOW WHAT?
After cowashing, you'll want to use a thicker, richer conditioner to moisturize your hair. The key to success of the CG routine is moisture. This conditioner can be either entirely or partially rinsed out (if you partially rinse out, the remainder functions as a leave in).

There are lots and lots of conditioners that are CG friendly. You just have to know where to look. Garnier Fructis Triple Nutrition is a popular drugstore rinse out that is easy to find. More and more stores have organic sections now which carry lines like Giovanni, which makes a few CG conditioners. Organic stores like Whole Foods and Trader Joe's also carry several CG conditioners. Sally's Beauty and ULTA carry some. Then, there is the wide world of conditioners available online. Check out the product review section of the CurlTalk forum for lots of ideas. Also, most of the users list their favorite products in their signatures, so find a member with hair like yours, and see what they are using!

PUT DOWN THAT BRUSH AND STEP AWAY FROM THE TERRY CLOTH!
Terrycloth and many kinds of brushes are bad for your hair. Many CG curlies on their fingers to comb out their hair, or only use a wide toothed comb when the hair is wet and coated with conditioner. Never ever ever ever EVER comb curly hair dry! This is begging for damage and breakage! Bristle brushes and brushes with little balls on the end of the spokes break up your curl pattern and cause frizz. Wide toother combs are more natural and gentle, mimicking your fingers width.

Terry cloth causes frizz in curly hair because it takes off so much of that moisture you're working so hard to put into your hair! Instead, simply squeeze out extra with your hands. Better yet, many products are much more effective when applied to soaking wet hair, so don't get rid of the extra water! You'll get less frizz if you use things like old t-shirts or microfiber towels on your hair rather than terry cloth because they are absorbent but not super absorbent.

STYLING CG CURLS
Now your hair is conditioned, wet, gently combed with hands or a wide toothed comb, and ready to be styled! I couldn't list all of the CG products on here if I tried, and as the population is starting to demand more natural products, more lines are popping up here and there offering you CG alternatives. There are products of every type for every price range. Do some research on naturallycurly.com, talk to members, ask questions, and read ingredients labels to find fabulous silicone free products! Experimentation is the name of the game. Everyone's hair is different. Something that gives one curly bouncy, glossy curls, could cause obscene dryness and breakage in another curly. When you are starting CG, I recommend keeping it simple. A leave in and a clear gel should do it for the first month or so. More on this later!

METHOD MADNESS!
There are lots of methods for styling your hair. Some of these include scrunching in products, raking in products, plopping, diffusing, etc etc.

It's easy to forget that the way you apply products is often just as important as what products you are using. My general rule of thumb for product application:
-Rake in leave ins to pull the hair away from your scalp and create some body and get curls going. Raking means you coat your hands with the product, and simply pull your fingers through your hair
-Rake and then scrunch in curl cremes. I like this because raking a bit of curl creme through first gets every strand with curl creme. Then by finishing with scrunching in curl creme, you really get your curl pattern going
-Scrunch in gel. Gel sets your curls, creating a cast of product that will hold the curl form while it dries. When it dries, the results gel crunch is "scrunched out" by using the same scrunching motion using to apply gel, but with your bare hands. This video is very instructive on scrunching in product.

Most curlies apply product to soaking wet hair. This helps with maintaining moisture and getting good curl formation and clumping.

Plopping is a method of encouraging curl formation after you've applied product. Here is the original video on plopping (at this site, it is called plunking), and here is my own video on how I do the same technique with a long sleeved t-shirt. Plopping works really well for some, but not everyone. Just something else to try :)

Air drying is the gentlest way to style your hair. If you must dry using heat, always use a diffuser. There are many kinds, including flat pancake diffusers, hot socks, bowl and finger diffusers, hard hat dryers. The bowl and finger model is the most popular. I use this kind with much success.

One thing is certain about any styling routine. DO NOT touch while drying! This causes frizz because you are disrupting the casts that the products have created. If you touch, the cast is broken, and your hair is free to frizz. Only scrunch out the crunch with completely dry hair.

CG is all about finding a routine that works for you. Checking out signatures on CurlTalk is a great way to get routine ideas. It's overwhelming at first, but there are lots of veteran posters who want to help you!

CLARIFYING
Sometimes no matter how careful we are with avoiding silicones, our hair will get build up and need to be clarified. This could happen because of a product we are using, which might have an ingredient our hair doesn't like. For example, many avoid castor oil because it builds up. Some people have build up issues with polyquats. When buildup happens, we don't have to run back to the sulfates. There are options like low poos (sulfate-free shampoos), shampoo bars, vinegar rinses, baking soda scrubs, and brown sugar scrubs to get rid of buildup.

TRANSITION PERIOD
There will likely be a time period in which your hair looks worse right after switching to CG. This is caused by your scalp not adjusting to the lack of sulfates as fast as you are changing what you are doing to your hair. Try to keep the routine very simple at first. A cowash, rinse out, leave in, and clear gel is all you need. The Herbal Essences line of gels (Totally Twisted, Body Envy, and Set Me Up) are CG friendly. The transition period can last anywhere from a couple of days to up to 6 weeks (this is rare). Don't give up hope. Your scalp will settle down, and you will see the results you want.

WAVIES AND MODIFIED CG
Wavy hair is in between curly and straight, and so while CG may work for some wavies, it sometimes does not work for others. Wavies are not as porous as curlies, and they often have more moisturized hair to start. This places them at risk for overconditioning, which is where they hair has too much moisture. It becomes impossibly soft and fluffy. Many wavies find that this can be avoided with the occasional or consistent use of a sulfate-free shampoo (low poo). There is a whole forum devoted to wavies on CurlTalk.

WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT YOUR HAIR TO MAXIMIZE YOUR SUCCESS!
This section is totally new to this revised edition of my guide! Our understanding of hair care changes over time, just like any other science. I felt it was time to update this guide to include new information which is now crucial, but that we didn't consider when I wrote this guide a year ago! The topics I'd like to address are: hair porosity, texture, and dewpoint. Even as someone who is new to CG, having a working knowledge of these concepts will greatly improve your success in picking products for your hair. It will also help those veterans on CurlTalk assist you if you can give them information about your hair's porosity and texture and what the dew points are where you live. These sections would not have been possible without several other curlies. I discovered none of this information! The leg work was done by wonderful curlies on CurlTalk, and I'm simply here to give you that information as best as I can.

POROSITY
Hair stylist Tiffany Anderson has a must read blog post on this topic.

Porosity is a measure of how well your hair can take in and hold onto moisture in essence. It's a measure of the state of your hairs' cuticles. The cuticle is the outermost layer of a hair strand. It's composed of "shingles" if you will, which lay on top of one another to form a protective barrier which preserves the core of the hair strand. The "shingles" function to keep moisture in and keep anything harmful out.

This cuticle is healthy. The "shingles" lay flat on one another. This strand of hair has normal porosity. The layers of the cuticle are in tact and haven't been disturbed too much. There is a little lift between the shingle layers. This means that moisture, product, color processes, etc, can get into the hair shaft, but the cuticle will help to keep it in once it gets there.

This cuticle is damaged. It is highly porous. As you can see, the shingles do not lay flat at all. Holes have been blown into the cuticle structure, lifting the shingles up and away from the core. Porous hair has often been heat damaged, or repeatedly color processed or bleached. Highly porous hair will absorb moisture very readily, but it can't hold onto it. As a result, porous hair is often dry, brittle, and fragile. Porous hair will take in product by the glob, but it will also lose it quickly. It will take color readily, but the color will fade faster. The challenge with porous hair is to get moisture in and keep it in. Your best bet with porous hair is to fill the holes left by the lifted shingles with protein. However, if you have coarse hair, you may not be able to. More on this later

This cuticle
is compact. The shingles lay flat against one another, but they are too flat. There is no lift between them. This is hair with low porosity. Low porosity hair will not absorb moisture, product, or color readily. This hair has often never seen a color process, and has not been heat damaged. While this is a healthy strand of hair, it is a bit of a challenge. This kind of hair will hold moisture very well, but you've got to figure out how to get the moisture in there in the first place! Low porosity hair will often repel product, or the product will just "sit" on the hair, not soaking in.

You can check what porosity your hair has by doing a simple test. Take a strand of hair and run your fingers up the strand (thumb and index finger moving toward the scalp). If it feels smooth, you likely have normal porosity. If your fingers move very fast and the strand feels slick, dense, and hard, you have low porosity. If your fingers "catch" going up the strand, feel like they are ruffling up the hair strand, or if the hair strand breaks, your hair is overly porous (credit goes to Tiffany Anderson for this test!)

TEXTURE
Another shout out to Tiffany on this topic!

Hair texture is simply how thick your individual hair strands are in diameter. The three textures are fine, medium, and coarse.

Fine hair is very thin in diameter. It's often limp and flyaway like. It doesn't tend to hold a style well. It can seem dry when it's in fact more often over-moisturized. This hair type loves protein. Thicker products can weigh it down. Humectants are your friend in the proper dew points. Fine hair often needs a cut with more weight because it tends to lie flat.

Medium hair is considered "normal." It can support a wide range of products and processes. It can take protein and moisture, and can use heavy and light products.

Coarse hair has a large diameter. Coarse hair often has too much protein in it naturally, so protein should generally be avoided, though some may not hurt. Moisture, emollients, and rich products are called for. It is stronger than medium or fine hair, but its inflexibility means it often cannot hold a style well. Coarse hair tends to expand east-west, so short cuts can be problematic.

DEWPOINT
Redcelticcurls is our resident dew point expert! Her blog is a dew point must read!

The media and beauty industry would have you believe humidity is what curlies should fear more than anything. Dewpoint, a cousin of humidity if you will, is a much better indicator of how your hair will behave in given weather conditions. Dew point is very easy to find out. Just check weather.com, accuweather, or the map of the US on the right hand side of my blog to find your daily dewpoint!

Humidity is a misleading number when dealing with haircare. First of all, 100% humidity in the summer and 100% humidity in the winter are clearly going to indicate different levels of moisture. This is because those numbers represent RELATIVE humidity. Also, 100% humidity in Arizona is very different from 100% humidity in Florida, even if we're talking about the same time of year.

Dew point is the temperature at which water will condense to form dew or fog. Dew point will never be higher than the air temperature. 20 degrees and 100% humidity means the dew point should be at 20 degrees (because the air is saturated). So dew point and humidity are related, but dew point helps you gauge how much moisture is really there more accurately.

The air can hold different amounts of water depending on the air temperature. Warmer air can hold more water than colder air. This is why 100% humidity on a summer day is so different from 100% humidity on a cold day. On a summer day, when there is a lot of moisture in the air, the dew point may be 60 or 70. That means that the water will condense at 60 or 70 degrees. Think about a fog at 70 degrees. Very oppressive! Now, the opposite scenario is that on a frigid winter day, the dew point may be in the teens or lower. This means that the water is not readily coming out of the air in condensed form, so the air is dry.

Ranges, according to Redcelticcurls:
-Negative infinity through 30 degrees = low dewpoint. This is the winter. It is dry! If there is no moisture in the air, your hair cannot retain any. Your hair wants to be in equilibrium with its environment. This means that if there is no moisture in the air, and your hair has some, it will give up its moisture to the air because your hair wants to have the same moisture content as the air around it. If the air around you has 0 figurative drops of water and your hair has 10 figurative drops of water, your hair will expell moisture until the air around it has 5 drops and it has 5 drops. This is the battle of winter. You have to continually replenish moisture because your hair will be continually giving it up to the dry air in low dewpoints. Deep treatments, rich conditioners, hair butters, creamy leave in-s, and humectant-free products will help you in winter. Humectants are products which work to make that equilibrium between your hair and the environment happen faster and more efficiently. As we'll see, they are your friend in moderate dews, but your mortal enemy in low dews, because they will just be pushing that moisture out of your hair and into the air! Common humectants are glycerine, panthenol, honey, propylene glycol, and vitamin B5.

-30 through 40 = in between, awkward transition. The air is neither moist nor super dry. It's a toss up, and will require experimenting. You may be able to use humectants here, and you may not. This range will coincide with season changes

-40-60 = moist and happy! This is a favorite time for many curlies. Humectants are welcome, as they will pull moisture into your hair instead of expelling it. The air is now comfortably moist, so the air now has the 10 figurative drops, and your hair has 0 (well hopefully you've been taking better care of it than that so it isn't that dry, but this is for illustrative purposes). Humectants will pull moisture into your hair to balance it out. Don't ignore your moisture treatments, but you can now use lighter products.

-60 and up = muggy and 80s hair revival. Some curlies will outright skip rinse out conditioners in these conditions. Humectants become somewhat dangerous here, because they'll pull too much water into your hair, making it swell and poof. Here, you will want to use antihumectants. These ingredients are water repellents. Castor oil, beeswax, coconut oil, palm oil, olive oil, and shea butter are antihumectants. The caveat with these ingredients is that because they are water repellents, they may build up on your with the CG routine. This is because in order to be water repellent, they must be at least partially insoluble in water. A hard hold gel will be your friend in these muggy conditions if you aren't willing to try antihumectants.

There you have it! My updated, revised, and HTML-cleaned up version of my guide to going CG. Happy curls everyone!

Saturday, December 13, 2008

I'm Bummed that I Don't Have My Camera With Me (Protein DT)


So I'm rather annoyed that I do not have my camera with me tonight because I did my first deep treatment and I'm loving the results!

I used Aubrey Organics GPB conditioner (be careful when you go to buy it because there is a shampoo and a conditioner). I bought it at whole foods, but you can find it online for like $7 a bottle. It's a conditioner that's very protein heavy. I wanted to use it for a deep treatment (DT) because I was curious to see how my hair reacted to such intense protein levels and I just wanted to see if it would bring out my 3a tendencies a bit more since my hair had been looking more 2c lately with this horrible dry winter weather.

I ran several globs through my hair, scrunched some in, smoothed some on top, etc etc. Then I had an idea to take my spray bottle (mix of 1 part L'oreal Vive Pro Nutri Gloss to like 8 parts water) and spray all over to get the hair wet. Why? I was thinking that the protein could get into my hair more if I wet my hair somehow and then the heat that was trapped by the plop that I did would create some humidity, which my hair loves! So recap: I got all my hair covered in GPB, then sprayed all my hair with my mix of my wash out conditioner and water, then plopped for about 45 minutes.

After the 45 minutes, my wonderful boyfriend got me taco bell and while he was gone I did a cowash like normal and styled with KCKT and KCCC.

I'm very happy to say that I have very sproingy 3a curls right now! Too bad I don't have anywhere to go to show them off and to make matters sadder, I don't have my camera! Gah! The frustration never ends :P

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

I'm Turning Into an Aloe Junkie!


I remember when I was a kid growing up in Arizona, I used to love to take the potted aloe plants we had around our pool and our patios and break off a small bit of a steam and play with the "goo" that came out. I probably never [intentionally] put it into my hair.

But now, 8 years after leaving the desert behind, I've rediscovered the "goo" that I used to find so fascinating. As I said in my last post, I recently picked up a tube of Lily of the Desert AVG with the help of my wonderful boy (he's allowed to have a car at his college). I tried it yesterday as a second day scruncher and had fantastic resutls, so today I tried a different experiment.

After my wash, I took half of the amount of Kinky Curly Knot Today (KCKT) that I would normally use (so half of a quarter) and put that in my palm. Then I took my LOTD and made up the missing half of the quarter with that. I then swirled the mix of half aloe half KCKT in my palm, then rubbed my hands together and raked the mix through. I scrunched it a tiny bit when I was done, then scrunched in my Kinky Curly Curling Custard (KCCC). I plopped for about 45 mins then air dried for about an hour and a half.

Though I was skeptical at first because much of the slip of the KCKT was obliviated by the aloe when I was raking it through, the results are fantastic!! Here are some pictures. I'm hoping the curl factor is due more to the aloe than the high dewpoint (58F) and the rain.




















Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Exams are burning me...maybe I should try some aloe...


I love terrible puns in blog titles!

Anyhoo, it is that time that any college student, curly or not, dreads. Exam weeks *dun dun dun*
Thus I have not been able to update you lately on what's going on with my hair. Unfortunately, I do not have a ton of time today to do this either, but my exams will be over on the 15th and then I'll have a month to experiment with hair things (hooray!)

Today, however, I did pick up something new. I went to the grocery store with my boyfriend who was in town for a few days and while I was there I picked up some Lily of the Desert Aloe Vera Gel. I had heard good things on curltalk about aloe in all kinds of ways: mixed with leave-ins, under gels, in refreshed sprays, for second day hair scrunched in with water, etc etc. So I decided that out of all those ways I'd probably be able to find at least one way that works well for me.

I decided to try it as a scrunch in for 2nd day hair. I washed yesterday via my normal routine and had a great hair day. My second day hair when I woke up this morning was much worse than usual because for some reason a lot of my hair had fallen out of the pineapple overnight. I wet my hands and scrunched water all over like I normally do for 2nd day hair. Then once I was finished water scrunching, I scrunched in about 3 drop sized globs onto one side of my hair in the same way I apply KCCC (see mysteryflavored's video). I repeated for the other side, then again upside down. I wasn't really expecting a miracle because 1) I didn't use too much and 2) my 2nd day hair was off to a very bad start from the beginning anyway.

So the results? A miracle!!!

Here's before I did anything to it:




















Very frizzy and tangly and a mess!

And here's after...















Got quite a bit of the curl back and much much much less frizz!!!! I'm quite happy with this result, especially considering what I started with! So I'm quite looking forward to experimenting with aloe in lots of other ways. I think next time I wash I'll mix it in with my leave in. Maybe this will fix my elongation problem with giovanni :o We shall have to wait and see. Until next time, to my fellow college curlies: good luck with exams!!

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Greg Juice = Decided...and problems with Giovanni DLI

I've made up my mind about Greg Juice, at least in the ways I've tried it so far. On dry hair, it's a disaster. It leaves it crunchy and I can't scrunch it out. I tried to wet my hands and scrunch, and when that didn't work I put a film of leave in (knot today) on my hands and tried it that way. Ick ick ick! Big time nastyness. Normally I wash on the 3rd hair day, but today (only 2nd day) after my chem lab I rushed straight into the shower. I'm thinking this could be due to the glycerine in it (glycerine is not a winter-friendly product in dry climates) so I'm definitely not going to try this on dry hair until the middle of summer! Ick!

I've heard of people using it on wet hair as a moisturizer, but I'm hesistant to ruin a perfectly good wash with it, especially in the winter. This product, due to the glycerine and the ickiness I've gotten so far, is going into the "save it for summer" box.

I also had another motive to wash today. Today my curls weren't curls. They were waves. Yikes! Major elongation. I'm a 2c/3a, and I want shrinkage, not elongation! I noticed the elongation on my first day hair, but it wasn't as drastic. Today I had my hair up in a scrunchie because it just looked icky (I use that word too much). To see if it was just that I had used Giovanni under KCCC, I used Knot Today today and my hair is back to it's curly self. No more Giovanni for a while I suppose

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Giovanni Direct Leave In


So today was wash day. Woke up at 6am to wash and then do some reading before my first class. Did my usual routine: suave naturals cowash, l'oreal vive pro nutri gloss (I thank my lucky stars for botticellibabe on nc.com every time I use this stuff) to condition, detangle, finger comb when I'm out of the shower, rake in/scrunch leave in, scrunch in KCCC. I've only tried Kinky Curly's Knot Today, the companion leave in for Kinky Curly Curling Custard.

I can get the Knot Today for like $15 a bottle (with shipping) with some internet searching. Giovanni Direct Leave In costs $7.99 a bottle at Target, Rite Aid, or Whole Foods, and it has no shipping costs. So GDLI wins on the basis of price.

What about the results, you ask? One compliment so far, and it's only 9:30am :) I'm very happy with the giovanni. My hair feels even softer than with the KCKT, and it prevented some of the crunch of the KCCC (there's no way to avoid it, and it's kind of fun to scrunch out the scrunch to reveal beautiful curls, but this took some of the crunch away). So on the basis of it being a better price and having a better result, I'm going to rotate between my KCKT and GDLI until my KCKT runs out (darn it, I just remembered I have another bottle on order). I also need to get more GDLI!

Monday, December 1, 2008

Greg Juice...I'm Undecided

After my morning calculus class today I picked up my package from Oyin. I rushed back to my dorm partly in excitement but also because it was raining and I didn't bring an umbrella out with me this morning. So when I arrived at my dorm, I had a bit of frizz starting to perk up from the drizzle. I opened the box, found a lovely blue bottle of greg juice, and spritzed some all over my hair.

The results? I can't really tell. It left me with some crunch which seems odd but that can be scrunched out. It didn't do anything for my frizz though, which was disappointing. I can definitely see a bit more curliness compared to this morning (this is second day hair that was washed and diffused yesterday). I'm thinking that if I can try this on my typical (air dryed) second day hair with no frizz to start (darn you rain!) and not having 84% humidity in the air it could have different results. So the cliffnotes: tried it, made it more curly, didn't fix rain frizz, a tiny bit of crunch, and I'm undecided.

I will say a word to the Oyin customer service, however. I emailed them several days ago asking about the status of my order since it has been almost a month since I ordered this stuff. They emailed me back yesterday and appologized for the delay in shipping and in responding to my email. To compensate, they gave me a coupon code for $5 off my next order. So let's hope the greg juice works more effectively when I try it again tomorrow so I can order more!