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Posts Tagged ‘curls’

WEEK 3: No ‘poo experiment

Day 1 (Sunday): No wash.

Day 2 (Monday): Water-only. Use Kiss My Face styling mousse. Looks good: shiny, bouncy.

Day 3 (Tuesday): Water-only. Styling mousse. Looks good. BUT I keep catching a little whiff of dirty hair (hey, it’s been 100-plus-degrees for a week, and I do sweat).

Day 4 (Wednesday): Try the A Wild Soapbar again, followed by ACV rinse. Styling mousse. Looks fine. Feels hella waxy/coated. I guess the ACV just isn’t for me.

Day 5 (Thursday): Water-only. Styling mousse, dash of Aloe 80 spray.

Day 6 (Friday): Water-only. Dr. Bronner’s Lavender Styling Creme.

Day 7 (Saturday): Wash with diluted Dr. Bronner’s Eucalyptus castile soap. Rinse with Dr. Bronner’s Citrus conditioning rinse. In the shower, the conditioning rinse made my hair feel heavy and silky. Very nice. No styling product–a departure for me.

Week 3 Hair

Week 3 Hair (ignore the angry eyes)

Week 3 Hair, Crown still seems dry

Week 3 Hair, Crown still seems dry

Go back to No ‘Poo Experiment: Week 2

Continue to No’ Poo Experiment: Week 4

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WEEK 1: No ‘poo experiment

(Previous week had switched to conditioner-only Curly Girl routine, which left my roots too greasy and my ends too crunchy)

Baking soda and apple cider mixes are 1 T to 1 C water.

Day 1 (Sunday): Washed with baking soda mix, rinsed with apple cider vinegar. Spritzed with Aloe80 styling spray. Scalp feels very clean. Hair is normal (used a bit too much styling spray).

Day 2 (Monday): Warm water only. Spritzed with Aloe80 styling spray. Scalp still feels pretty clean. Hair seems dry, crunchy (maybe too much styling spray?).

Day 3 (Tuesday): Apple cider vinegar rinse, cold water rinse. A dab of grapeseed oil distributed through the hair (not near the roots), followed by lavender spritz (adapted from Curly Girl: distilled water w/ lavender essential oil). Once dry, hair is soft, curls are shiny. Feels clean. Overall, excellent. Even by late afternoon, little to no frizz or curl separation. NIGHT: Hair still feels a bit dry. Applied some Burt’s Bees Apricot Baby Oil to sleep in overnight.

My curly hair on Day 3 of the no 'poo regimen.

Day 4 (Wednesday): BS/ACV and lots of scrubbing and combing. Lavender spritz. Can tell I didn’t get all the oil out, but it still looks decent, a bit limp. Feels quite soft and untangled.

Day 5 (Thursday): Oops, I forgot to write down this day. Water-only, I think.

Day 6 (Friday): Water-only. Feeling pretty greasy and little bit limp, though the curls still looking pretty good and cohesive.

Day 7 (Saturday): No wash.

Go back to No ‘Poo Experiment: Introduction
Continue to No ‘Poo Experiment: Week 2

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I’ve hated my hair. Until I was in 7th grade, I brushed it out daily. This is what my wavy-haired mom did, so I assumed this is what I should do too. But one morning before school, I washed my hair in the sink at my grandmother’s house and “scrunched” in a handful of gel. I sat motionless in front of a box fan (the poor man’s hair dryer)…and I was amazed. I had CURLS.

After the novelty wore off, I struggled against my curly hair. Cursed it. Brushed it. Flat-ironed it. Colored it. Cut it. As I approach 30, I’ve finally started to accept what people have always complimented me on: a mass of unruly ringlets.

A close-up of my curly hair

A close-up of my curly hair

In search of hair salvation, I read Curly Girl by Lorraine Massey. Though I have tried a range of products (gel, mousse, wax, pomade, frizz serum), none has ever really given me the glossy, frizz-free curls I wanted. Massey, though, suggested something that I had never thought of: Stop shampooing my hair. I don’t consider myself an unwashed hippie (though I do have hippie tendencies), but this sounded doable.

Massey explains that the natural sebum produced by the scalp—what most of us would think of as “grease”—shouldn’t be stripped every day by harsh detergents in shampoo such as sodium lauryl sulfate or ammonium lauryl sulfate. What we think of as “squeaky clean” hair may actually be damaged hair.

Massey says she hasn’t shampooed her hair in years. She recommends using only silicone-free conditioner and alcohol-free gel, along with her recipes for hair treatments that are easy to whip up in the kitchen.

OK, so can I do this? Sadly, my favorite conditioner, Origins’ Knot Free, is not silicone-free. (Oh, well, I really shouldn’t be spending $30 on conditioner anyway.) I switched to another conditioner I had on hand, bioInfusion Rosemary Mint. This conditioner is thinner and not as rich as Knot Free, but it’s also cheaper. I “washed” my hair as suggested with the conditioner and followed with gel. Eh, pretty greasy.

And a week later, it wasn’t any better. The conditioner-only routine left my hair both greasy and crunchy. But by this time, I had started reading on LiveJournal about another method, called “no ‘poo.” Based on simple base/acid chemistry, the no ‘poo method relies on washing with a dilute baking soda mix and conditioning with dilute apple cider vinegar. Since I have both of those things in my kitchen, this should be even simpler than the conditioner-only method.

Continue to No ‘Poo Experiment: Week 1

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