Tag Archives: long hair

Nicki Minaj Shows Her Natural Hair (PHOTOS)

21 Mar nicki_minaj_real_hair_globalgrind

To all Nicki Minaj fans she has given us another insight into her natural hair. As we know Nicki has constant wig changes  Some which look nice and some which are straight horrendous!  Back in October 2012 Nicki Minaj showed us her long natural tresses and we were impressed.

Nicki Minaj recently has toned things down by showing a more natural side, and it’s very rare that fans get to see the real Nicki , but she is letting us closer and closer.

Nicki’s Long Natural Hair

Nicki Minaj tweeted out the photo with hashtags that read: #LongHairDontCare #HangTime #ImaWearItOutWhenItTouchesMyASS.”

We’ll be waiting for the day she decides to ditch the wigs all together and rocks her natural style.

Weight Gain Update!

13 Feb l_FI050106FTTIM002

Hey ladies,

This is my weight gain update. I have put on a couple of pounds and let me tell you what I have changed.

I have added protein shakes to my diet – A misconception is that protein shakes are for guys and that you will get bulky which is not true, it is actually full of vitamins and we need protein in our diets pretty regularly.

Weight training – I want to put on weight so I only have a small amount of cardio in my routine to just get the heart pumping. But ladies do not run from the weights it is a great workout and a way to get your body looking toned, you just have to look at bikini models they weight train and look FIIINE! Using weights does not necessarily mean you will look like a bodybuilder. So much work has to be done to get like. ALSO rest in between sessions! You can overwork muscles.

So overall I am feeling good. I am really keeping up with my routine and trust me that is hard, having children and being at university. But a good body and long lustrous hair takes work ladies!

Another update will be up soon. Next time I will tell you my work out routine.

Take care honeys.

Sonia 

xx

 

Natalie Gumede – Our Corrie Curly

11 Jan natalie gumede

So I was channel hopping when I saw this BEAUT on my TV screen!

I had no idea who she was as I do not watch Corrie.. But isn’t she just gorgeous!!.. Her hair is amazing! Natalie was doing an interview on This Morning. I might have to check her out in Coronation street. WooHoo #teamnatural #curlyhair #naturalhair

Follow her @NatalieGumede

Sonia x

 

 

 

Found this post on chemicals in hair products… Thought i would share it with you guys.. x

26 Oct Hairstraightening5

I found this post written by Janet Singleton from the site http://www.thedefendersonline.com.

I found it very interesting indeed. Hope you all like it too.

Chris Rock’s documentary Good Hair caused bad feelings last summer for many black female film-goers, who felt more betrayed than they did fairly portrayed by the film. Lost in all of the earsplitting debates and viral blog posts, was any deeper discussion of the health implications for black women and girls who use hair straighteners.

Millions of black women have had the experience: You reach under the cabinet and take out the perm kit, its box graced by a picture of a fairytale-haired model. You spread the contents over your kitchen table, review the directions, and gingerly mix the activator into the cream compound.

Hairstraightening5

After you are done slathering on the perm; waiting for it to take; shampooing; rinsing repeatedly; conditioning; and drying, you look down at the leftover “activated” emulsion, the crumpled plastic gloves, the drop of activator still lurking in its small bottle. And you feel that you are at the scene of a biohazard in your own home. So you discard the spoils of your cosmetic duties in a place where no cat or two-year-old can access the contamination, and mentally earmark the tainted mess for the next trip to the Dumpster.

If you have ever wondered about the safety of chemical hair straighteners, you are in tall-cotton company. In the last decade, scientists, academicians, and physicians have been pondering that suspicion, too. “My colleagues talk about relaxers possibly being correlated with hypertension and other diseases,” says Dina Strachan, MD, a dermatologist, who specializes in treating ethnic skin.

The doctor chooses not to relax her own hair, not because of medical suspicions, but a personal preference. “As a black woman, I didn’t feel it was very affirming,” she says.

Relaxer-related problems she encounters in her Manhattan office are not serious, though. “I see a lot of people with hair damage, but not skin damage, from straighteners,” she says. “One patient said her hair broke off in patches.” The possibility that more ominous conditions are related to relaxers “is definitely worth taking a look at,” Strachan says.

In 1997, scientists at Boston University and Howard University quietly began to do just that. As a part of the groundbreaking Black Women’s Health Study, a team headed by epidemiologist Lynn Rosenberg surveyed 59,000 African-American women over six years, looking for a link between relaxers and breast cancer, a disease that tends to manifest earlier in black females than in their white counterparts. The researchers found no increase in incidence of the disease among those participants who used chemical straighteners.

But Rosenberg, professor of epidemiology at the Boston University School of Public Health, said more study is needed because, “We haven’t closed the book on hair straighteners.”

BWHS also found no connection between straighteners and preterm birth among black mothers. Previously, a smaller study of North Carolina women, published in the American Journal of Epidemiology, also discovered no tie, but some scientists still consider it an open question whether toxic chemicals may be absorbed through the scalp in sufficient amounts to increase the risk of various adverse health effects, including cancers.

LYE-ER, LIAR, HAIR ON FIRE

What has researchers looking askance at relaxers is that usually the key ingredient for do-it-yourself and salon-oriented relaxers is either sodium hydroxide or calcium hydroxide, powerful caustics that burn the scalp and possess the ability to melt metal. Sodium hydroxide—NaOH— is simply the chemical name for lye. Calcium hydroxide— Ca(OH)2— while not identical, is a next of kin. The latter has been replacing the former in popular brands. Calcium hydroxide and the slightly milder guanidine hydroxide have become more common on product labels in the last decade. Still, the begging-to-be-punned “no-lye” claims on the boxes are a matter of semantics, or maybe just outright lies.

Neither the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), nor the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS), nor the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) characterize lye as a cancer causer. Yet a web page of the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR), a branch of DHHS,acknowledges “reports of cancer of the esophagus 15 to 40 years (after exposure), caused by corrosion induced by sodium hydroxide.”  These malignancies, it says, “were most likely the result of tissue destruction and scar formation rather than a direct carcinogenic action of sodium hydroxide itself.”

Though the study does not detail the circumstances of exposure to lye, it implies inhalation was a factor. “Off gassing of these products is dangerous,” says Leeann Brown, spokesperson for the Environmental Working Group, a consumer advocacy organization. “It’s not just a matter of direct application, but people sitting in well ventilated salons inhale fumes from relaxer chemicals.”

THE LADY DOTH PROTEST…

Manufacturers apparently try to counter sodium hydroxide’s tough-guy reputation by tagging their products with sweet names: “Soft,” “gentle,” and “lovely,” are words commonly used in relaxer titles. And for the political or health minded potential user, terms like: “Africa,” “organics,” “botanicals,” and “herbals.”

The claims of relaxers marketed for children seek to be even more reassuring. One product’s box shows two little girls with glistening straight hair and wide smiles and says it is the “world’s first and only” relaxer with ESP—“Extra Sensitive Protection.” And along with the usual chemicals, its ingredient list includes chamomile, olive oil, and St. John’s Wort, an herbal anti-depressant. Perhaps the manufacturers figure that the kid’s hair might be depressed after six years (its minimum age recommendation) of being kinky.

SAVING THE WORST FOR THE YOUNGEST

Yet children’s relaxers can be more caustic than ones made for adults, according the Skin Deep Cosmetic Safety Database, a web site created by the Environmental Working Group that ranks brands according to perceived health risks. The site assigns numbers one through ten to personal care products to indicate the level of hazard based on the chemicals contained and how the preparations will be used. Africa’s Best Kid’s Organics No-Lye Organic Conditioning Relaxer System with ScalpGuard receives a “10” for toxicity.

Leeann Brown, spokesperson for the EWG, says it’s not safe to apply any brand of chemical straightener to the head of a child.. “If straightening is started at a young age and done throughout life, it all adds up.”

Not all juvenile encounters with relaxers are cosmetic, though. Those are the ones that require a trip to the emergency room. “Ingestion of hair relaxer (by toddlers) has become increasingly common,” say the authors of a paper, written in the 90s, about children admitted for poisoning and mouth burns at Rainbow Babies and Children’s Hospital in Cleveland, Ohio.

People underestimate the vulnerability of skin, says Andrew Ternay, University of Denver chemistry professor and author of The Language of Nightmares, a book about the use of chemicals in terrorism. “It is a living organ, not just an inert piece of something. There are materials capable of doing substantial damage to (your body) through it.”

LESS IS MORE

“Less is better,” Brown says. The way to be safer is to use fewer cosmetics, is EWG’s position. They are not alone in encouraging alternative approaches to personal care. Some cosmetologists are encouraging the return of heat-based press-and-curl styling, and beauty experts are proclaiming the virtues of using pure olive oil as a hair conditioner.

Commercial cosmetics can contain agents strong enough to affect even fetuses in the womb, says Stacy Malkan, author of Not Just a Pretty Face: the Ugly Side of the Beauty Industry. Her motto is “you can’t trust marketing claims.”

Ternay says that often consumers are wooed by appealing graphics on boxes and fail to read or understand the labeling. “The ladies don’t read the ingredients,” he says. On the other hand, product content listings can mislead buyers by listing the same or similar substance under different names, thus hiding the full amount of the ingredient in the cosmetic.

SAFE WHEN USED AS DIRECTED?

“The FDA is very frustrating,” Brown, of the EWG, says. Agency oversight of the cosmetic industry is nearsighted due to legal trapdoors that allow many product ingredients to go unlisted or masked by decoy names, she says.

FDA critics like Ralph Nader say the agency has been underfunded and de-fanged for years, and point to dangerous drugs and pet foods that have flooded the US market unopposed. “Sometimes US firms have to make safer versions of their cosmetics for European markets,” says Stephanie Hendricks of Campaign for Safe Cosmetics. “Legal requirements there are more stringent”

BLAME IT ON RIO…

But in 1995 the FDA did swoop down and confiscate two brands of relaxers. Consumers complained that Brazilian imports Rio Hair Naturalizer System and Rio Hair Naturalizer System with Color Enhancer not only caused burning, itching, and hair loss, it could turn hair green. Reportedly by 2004, up to nearly 2 million dollars worth of the product was destroyed, and it was taken off the market.

The effects the banned product created when it tried to “enhance” color may have been dramatic, but the combination of dye and straightening chemicals might do even worse damage than making your head look like Astroturf, Dr. Ternay says. Though beauticians traditionally recommend a two-week lag time between perm and dye applications to avoid hair breakage, a few newer products claim dye can be applied directly following a relaxer. “That’s scary,” he says. Procedures like washing and perming “sensitize” the scalp and makes it more absorbent, he says. “I’d be loath to have somebody treating my wife’s head with any sort of perm and then treating it with dye.”

CONDITIONERS: KILLING YOU SOFTLY…

But what usually follows a perm is a conditioner, and they are healthy and good for you and your hair, right? After all they have words in their names calling to mind life-saving procedures: “Therapy,” “emergency,” “renewal.” And of course there is the ever-popular “herbal” and “organic.”

Dr. Rosenberg, of Boston University, has concerns about conditioners. “Women who used products advertised as having animal placenta were shown to have a higher rate of breast cancer,” she says. Those brands contained hormones.

“Hormones are more easily absorbed into the skin,” Strachan says. She adds, though, that the skin on our heads is dense, causing decreased vulnerability to certain substances.

Estrogenic preparations are more likely aimed at African-American women, Malkan warns. They are marketed as remedies for “dry and damaged hair,” harmed from perms and other procedures.

TO DYE FOR

One potentially damaging practice for the hair of women of all races is coloring. But in the 70s scientists began to suspect that black coal tar hair dye could cause cancer. Extensive studies in the 80s and 90s of primarily Caucasian women in Europe and America, including one published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, that indicated those who used dark dye for 20 years or more had a four-fold increased incidence of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, confirmed the suspicion. As a result, according to the FDA’s Koontz, the agency has incorporated the known risk of coal tar dye into the warning label requirements for cosmetics.”

WHO WAS THAT MASKED CHEMICAL?

You cannot, however, depend on the label to tell you if hormones lurk in conditioners and other cosmetics, Malkan says. “With some products you would not know without sending them to a laboratory.” She adds that “parabens,” preservatives commonly used in cosmetics, should be avoided because they are “hormone disrupters,” and they, too, may be associated with malignancies.

Another factor that dims transparency is the cloak of silence about where the whole kit and caboodle came from in the first place. More manufacturers are making their relaxer kits in whole or part in China. “Companies that distribute hair products may not know what is in the ones that are supplied by China, or from any country, for that matter,” Malkan says.

Relaxers have become citizens of the world. A product geared toward children hails from Britain. And the trail for owners of the “Africa’s Best” line leads to an non-contactable contact in Melbourne, Australia.

Nor does being in the United States necessarily make manufacturers more accessible. Despite this writer’s repeated requests for an interview, no representative from Revlon, makers of the Dark & Lovely line of relaxers, returned calls. The same non-response came from Johnson’s Products, makers of gentle treatment. Manufacturing origins are hardly the most important mystery, though. The safety of relaxers, themselves, is the bigger enigma. There are few studies and lingering questions. “We are just saying we don’t know,” says EWG’s Leeann Brown. “But we should know.”

Janet Singleton is an award-winning freelance journalist.

Extensions Documentary: Who’s hair are you wearing??

5 Oct

Hey guys,

Many of you may or may not know that I have been a natural for my whole life lol. But I was not really on a healthy hair journey until recently but here is something that I watched years ago that I feel some people may not of not seen. Note that this was before the good hair film :) .

A lot of us buy things and we do not associate the product we buy with the place that it has come from, or the way that it was sourced. We actively, although perhaps subconsciously, construct meaning according to our knowledge of the world and our experience in it. Building associations with concepts presented to us from advertisements, instead of actually knowing where and how it got to us in the first place. Please share this with as many women as you can.

The following documentary is Just a little food for thought.

Sonia

xoxo

I Hate The Word ‘Nappy’

2 Aug

Yesterday morning I was down in sunny Brighton waiting to get my exclusive braids done.
I call then exclusive because it is the Ghanaian method of ‘zipping’ which only a few in the UK can do.
(I say a few but after researching, I literally only know of this woman who does it).

I will let you guys know how it turns out in a later blog!

Anyways, whilst waiting, I was asked by a young lady via my Blackberry Messenger what I meant by “Naturally Curly”. [in reference to our Facebook group 'Naturally Curly in the UK'.]
I explained to her that most individuals have curly hair in it’s natural wet state even if they were intricate tight curls as in an “afro”

She then answered that her hair is “nappy” because she is African.


I told her that her hair is not “nappy” and that it is a derogatory word.

This is what I wanted to get across to people…

I cannot stand words such as ‘nappy, kinky, kink, coarse, hard, tough’ etc
Such negative words constitute to the negative connations that black women/girls associate with their hair.
The history behind these words were never to glorify or celebrate ‘black’ hair, it was to label and set apart for other types of hair i.e Caucasian, Asian, Chinese aka ‘nice’ hair

Thus influencing females to want to change the texture, feel and look of their natural hair instead of embracing what God gave them.

I understand that people use such words to describe what their hair is, however, there are other words that can be used such as ‘thicker, fuller, tighter curls,’ etc.
With these descriptions, we can break away from the stereotypical words that we have been conditioned to use.

I believe that there is no such thing as ‘good’ hair or ‘bad’ hair only ‘healthy’ hair or ‘not so healthy hair’.

Treasured Tresses strives to change mindsets and provide knowledge and advice through this blog, our website and our consultations on how people can look after their hair and love what they have.
Hence our name, we want everyone to “Treasure their Tresses”.

Annie xoxo

Am I Going Mad Or Have I Been Shoulder Length Since Forever?

29 Jul 1035538_f248-224x300

Hello Ladies,

We have had many questions and one in particular is about length! We all want long flowing tresses at the end of the day; thats what all the straightening, weave wearing and track gluing is for! But the issue for many is that their hair does not grow longer then shoulder length and if it does that must surely mean your either mixed with something or have ‘good hair’. But the truth is shoulder length hair is more commonly seen in those with textured relaxed hair and that  the 12 inch mark is usually the average length for most of us. 
If you are one of those people read on and if not read on anyway you can help a friend out and find information for your own healthy hair journey. Even if your hair exceeds this length it does not mean you are reaching your healthy hair potential!

If we want to defy the norm of 12 inches being the end of our hair length then we have to change our routine but honeys ‘this does not happen overnight’. If you only shampoo and condition your hair when you feel like it, dye your hair and use excessive heat this is the length you will be stuck with! Some of us even just totally neglect our hair and washing and conditioning is a myth and even the rain is a terrible culprit lol! But to achieve the longer tresses that you want you have to make a change in the way you see your hair.

Hair Damage

Our hair day to day even with the most carefully planned routine will come in contact with damage whether that be the strain of day to day styling, nutritional issues, chemical processes even aggressive combing can cause a problem. Accumulating information is the first step to change. Research.

Chemical Stress

Texturizers, Relaxers and permanent hair colours are BIG factors into why we do not go past 12 inches. Once chemicals have been on your hair it is almost certain that your pre hair structure cannot be regained as the structure is then changed forever when you use chemicals. From then on that hair is now damaged. The full extent of the damage greatly depends on how often the process is performed in conjunction with the stylists understanding and experience of the chemical alteration.

How much do you know about your relaxer?  Hair products? And the culprits that cause chemical damage?

Physical Manipulation

Another cause of damage to our hair is the physical pressure that we put on our hair with our day to day styling (excessive manipulation), improper handling of the hair & tension related styles. Even shampooing and condition in the wrong way can cause your hair to tangle. Heat is also a big issue for curly hair also the non stop brushing and wrapping the hair that is needed to acheive a straight style and braids that have been put in too tight can cause tension problems.  Even things deemed as really small like improper use of our hairbands can become a problem.  When you take out your hairband and see hair wrapped around it, that is  a no-no!! Something as simple as using a hairband that has no metal bit on it can stop this from being an issue!

There is also the environmental damage and nutritional/dietary requirements that we do not usually meet however this will be spoken about in a further post.

It all sounds very daunting but if a proper hair care regime is introduced these issues can be resolved and prevented. Even though there are some things we
cannot account for, we can actively stop some damaging factors which will 
make a big difference in the structure and overall look of your hair.

Take Care & start researching on your healthy hair journeys, be sure to keep your questions coming in too.

Sonia 
xoxo

Natural Hair Celebrity Thoughts: Wynter Gordan, Chrisette Michelle & Solange Knowles

21 Jul Wynter Gordan

I have been looking at natural hair celebrities through my natural hair journey and thought I would do an entry on a few of them. Highlighting their feelings on natural hair etc and showing them in all their curly greatness as us as women need to do this more. Respect each other in our natural beauty! 

 Wynter Gordan

Wynter Gordon when interviewed said what i thought to be quite an amazing piece of motivational speaking that usually women in the industry do not mention us as they do not practice fully what they may preach about loving yourself and your identity! But we have found an inspiration in Wynter Gordon. Here is the highlighted portion from an interview she conducted quite recently:

 

Dave: Can I just say, in the last few months I’ve noticed more

bloggers and magazines complimenting your look and style.

Wynter: Yeah! It’s interesting! Honestly, I feel like because I’m

owning it, people are starting to see. Before, there was no space for

people to get to know me or see who I am from day-to-day, so I took

charge and started my own blog to let people into my world. I’m just

putting myself out there and thankfully people like it.

Dave: One thing I really like about your look is that you are proud to

rock an afro!

Wynter: I am. [Black women] spend the most money in the world on hair

products! As a culture, we’re taught as young girls to not love our

hair. We’re taught that “bushy” and “thick” is wrong. In TV and

magazines, all the girls have straight hair. They don’t represent that

black is beautiful. A lot of African-American girls don’t think they

can pull off [the natural bushy hair]. They don’t think they’re pretty

enough or feel confident enough to do it. You have to get to a point

of saying, I’m tired of spending $500 a month on a weave or going to

the hairdresser every five minutes, and just let it be.

 

Wow! How amazing is that because many of us can concur that the prices we pay to have straight sleek hair is awful!! And our day trips to the salon are becoming a bit boring, i do not have as a mum a whole day for sitting in a salon when i could be spending that day doing something more beneficial to my life! Like taking the day out with my partner or friends for a visit to the spa ;) , which has become a new-found natural love of mine.

Solange Knowles


Solange Knowles was just the little sister of Beyoncé lets all be honest but now with her natural hair movement, she has bloomed into a star in her own right! She looks hot!! But Solange had to deal with the woes that being natural can sometimes come with.

One MTV reporter said

‘The motive is still unclear, but considering how gorgeous her mane was,

it’s not a great style choice.’ On her decision to be free from her

weaves, lace wigs and wigs. The Daily Fail accused Solange of “doing a

Britney,” even thought Britney shaved her head right down to the scalp

and Solange has a close-cropped, natural haircut.


The piece by Donna McConnell read:

[Solange] once playfully said she would ‘go crazy like Britney’ if

people kept comparing her to her sister.

And it seems she might finally have flipped as she hit the streets of

Los Angeles in a new shorn hairstyle yesterday.

Solange responded by saying:

“listen if i wanted to make a statement i would have twitpic’d photo shoot ect. 

i was simply taking my son to school stupid paps took pic. ive had my hair cut

like this for two weeks.  i was NOT inspired by anyone but myself.  i have done

this twice in my life. i was 16. i was 18. did not care about your opinion

then dont care now. dont need your attention or your co-sign. i am #3.

trending topic before IRAN & some of you cant even locate it on a map.

its sad. dont want a edge up or a perm because im not trying to make

this “a style” or a statement. i just wanted to be free from the

bondage that black women sometimes put on themselves with hair. this

phase of my life i want to spend  the time the energy and the money on

something else not in the hair salon. im not mad at  all of you that

have made your opinions known and have sent negative energy my way. i

expected this of you.you have the right to have an opinion so do i.

ONLY reason i responded to this i have is because i was disappointed

to see my name more talked about then #iranelection. we gotta do

better people.”

I loved this response as it really shows that women having there natural hair should not be such a BIG deal!! It is what you are born with and you will drive yourself crazy trying to be any other way. There are so many other bigger problems in the world then our hair as long as we know how to look after it and educate others & our children, natural hair care will become second nature.

 

Chrissette Michelle

 

Chrissette Michelle has admited that she has gone natural like 3 times before and that her families hair grows quick, I love the fact she is not length concious and just does her hair to how she feels, here is an interview with Chrissette:

Afrobella: Talk to me about the decision you’ve made recently. I saw

photos of you with your hair cut really, really short, but you’re

wearing a hat. Did you shave your head, or is this a big chop, to

start afresh with your natural hair texture? What inspired you to go

natural again?

Chrisette: My hair and I had a really bad argument. She was being

sprayed with alcohol and burnt with irons. She was being over

processed and yanked and pulled by weave strings and suffocated by

glue. She told me if I didn’t straighten up and fly right that she was

leaving. I was out on tour, and day after day of this torturous

regimen I began to feel like I was hurting myself. I wasn’t being fair

to my body. I was ingesting and supporting harsh products and

literally ruining myself beginning with my hair. I told my band and

tour family that when we all landed home in 6 weeks I would apologize

to myself and begin a new relationship with myself beginning with my

hair. The boys took me to their favorite barber Manny over in Sherman

Oaks and applauded my decision to be honest with myself and showcase

what I believe is beautiful. I’m proud of myself. I know that there is

a place for my beauty in this world and I plan to celebrate who I am,

beginning with my roots. I had about a 1/2″ of new growth but I wanted

to go lower like my mothers hair as well as my make-up artists hair.

The boys told the barber “She wants a Number 2 clipper!!! And fade it

out on the edges!!! No Hard Line!!!” and I said “No shape me up some”

I don’t know if I’ll do that next time. I was so relieved to hear him

say $25 bux I gave him this tip which now that I think about it wasn’t

the standard 20%. But you girls know our styles run past the

HUNDREDS!! This was a steal!

PS: Tell my sisters I said “smile!!!!! at!!!!! each!!!!! other!!!!!! often!!!!!”

 

You can check out thisischrisettemichele.com for more about her BC.

 

Another big factor which is part of everyone’s decision it seems is the extortionate prices we spend on our hair in the salon or even through being a product junkie ( I was a self-confessed one!). This problem also brings the question to mind, we are spending all of that money and we are ruining our hair? Surely this does not make sense. If you are going to use a salon, choose the right one, using the right products and sharing enough information with you as to how to look after your tresses after all these people are meant to have the know-how, right?

If we was growing a flower & saw what we was using was killing it, surely we would stop, why is our hair so different i wonder?

Sonia

xoxo

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-1201574/Beyonces-sister-Solange-Knowles-does-Britney–singer-shaves-brunette-locks.html

http://www.afrobella.com/2010/04/12/chrisette-micheles-natural-hair-journey/

http://feedlimmy.wordpress.com/2011/05/04/wynter-gordon-interview/

5 Tips For Retaining Hair Length – For Those Not On Our Twitter :)

13 Jul
Tip One: Protect your hair & ends from heat & physical damage with low manipulation hairstyles. ♥
Tip Two: Keep a good diet and drink plenty of water to moisturize your scalp. Healthy Hair starts from the inside! ♥
Tip Three: Make conscious product choices! ♥
Tip 4: Long Hair is old hair, so it needs extra protection from breakage. ♥
Tip Five: Build a healthy hair regimen
xoxo

My thoughts on D41 as a de-tangling brush?

19 May Picture of my hair before and after detangling

Hi Honeys,

This is a little post on my first encounter with the Denman 41. 

After having used a wide tooth comb and tangle teezer for the last 2 years for de-tangling, I found that my hair was not being de-tangled as easy as it used to be. This is through my hair getting longer and thicker due to the extra TLC that i have put into my natural hair.

Through much research on the different brushes around for my hair structure, I found on paper the Denman 41 to be a great match. There are not many reviews online about this brush, so the lack of information did make me skeptical as there are many reviews on the other Denman brushes. So I took the gamble and ordered a few for our stock.  Here is a question and answer review on it.

My thoughts straight from the packet?

Looking at the packet it has a label that states that this Denman brush has ‘wide spaced pins ideal for thick and afro hair’.  Before my natural hair journey this would have impressed me, but through seeing tons of products and tools stating it to be for thick hair I was not really bothered lol. Looking at the brush I did like the looks of it, it looks wider spaced then the other Denman’s and the pins are definitely wider spaced and also longer then the other Denman brushes.

Image of the Packaging and Label

How did you find detangling?

I found the detangling of this brush to be very, very good!! I was shocked at how the brush did glide through my hair easily (starting from the ends slowly detangling up towards the scalp)

Are there any features you find especially helpful?

I find the spacing of the pins and the length of the pins to be extremely helpful for medium to long thick natural hair as this helped me detangle my curls easily and efficiently.  I think this brush may not work as well on short thick hair.

Are there any down sides to this product?

I have not found any on my first use of this brush, but if I do find anything I will be updating on a future entry.

What routine did you incorporate this brush into, how did you use it?

I would usually finger detangle my hair before brushing, but with this brush I didn’t do that to see the full benefits of it, and to be honest, finger detangling is not needed with this brush on my hair. I just worked my way from the roots upwards and found that to be very beneficial. I also checked the hairs after detangling, found them to have bulbs and not be breakage! I used this brush on soaking wet hair with our brand of Treasured Tresses Tea Tree Conditioner.

Picture of my hair before and after de-tangling

Where to buy?

Contact Us For Further Information

If there are any other questions feel free to ask.

Sonia

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