Hair: Care, Styling and Presentation

An important aspect to looking your best is making sure your hair is cared for, styled and presented in the best way you can with the tools and products you have.

While the basics of how to build a hair care routine lie in the foundations of wash, dry, and style, there are many other factors to consider for the healthiest, thickest, and shiniest hair.

Although you don't need a dozen products and tools to get the hair you want, there is more to hair care must-haves than shampoo and conditioner.

hairIf you're ready to get the most out of your hair, here's a beginner's guide on how to build a hair care routine.

Hair Type

Hair type isn't just about texture or the way it hangs, whether its straight, wavy or curly or its color.

There are also factors such as how well your hair absorbs moisture or whether it breaks easily that helps determine your hair type. Below I've covered the five major factors determining the types of hair that are common, to help determine whether you have thick, fine, coarse, frizzy or oily hair.

Diameter

This looks at the actual physical thickness of each strand of your hair.

To do this, you can do a simple strand test. Take one hair strand between your fingertips, if you don't feel anything this is a sign of fine hair.

If you do feel the single strand, your hair is of medium width, and if it feels thick or textured, your hair is likely coarse.

Density

Hair density refers to how much hair you actually have growing on your scalp, or how many hair follicles occupy each square inch.

To determine your hair density, take a handful of hair from the front of your head and gently pull it to the side. If a lot of your scalp is visible between the bunch of hair that you pulled, you have thin density.

If you can barely see your scalp at all, your hair's density is thick. Anything in between is medium density.

Elasticity

Have you ever tried to stretch or snap a hair strand? Your hair's reaction is the simple way to determine the elasticity and strength of your hair.

If the hair strand snaps immediately after trying to pull it between your fingers, your hair elasticity is low, whereas if you're able to stretch the strand your hair elasticity is very high. Hair elasticity helps determine how well your hair can hold any styling.

Low elasticity is linked to thin hair, whereas high elasticity, thick to normal hair.

Porousness

This is your hair's ability to absorb moisture and product is really how porous it is.

To determine your hair's porosity, fill a bowl with water and place a single strand of hair in the bowl. If your strand sinks to the bottom it has high porosity and is absorbing all the moisture.

If your strand remains under the surface, but floats, your hair is well-balanced and is of "normal" porosity. If the strand floats above the surface of the water your hair has low porosity and does not absorb moisture easily.

High porosity usually is a result of damaged, frizzy or dry hair. Low porosity can sometimes feel oily as it will take a lot of product in but may not distribute it accordingly.

Texture

This one's easy, is your hair straight, wavy, or curly?

Determining your hair type is easier than your dating type, especially because it's yours and you know your own hair better than anybody, right?

Knowing your hair type will help you determine which products you need the most and how to build your hair care routine to meet all your needs.

It's important to keep in mind that hair changes with seasons, for example you may find your hair more frizzy or curly in humid and hot weather or that your hair is less porous in colder months. Slight adjustments may be needed to your routine but shouldn't throw you off your game.

Hair Products

While the type of needed products will depend on your hair needs, there are a few must-haves for any hair care routine:

However, a note on paddle brushes: They are made with different types of bristles and these can be chosen based on hair type. For instance, if you have thick hair, choose a brush with sturdier bristles like nylon and synthetic, which can run smoothly through textured hair.

Washing Your Hair

Now that you're more familiar with your hair type and must-haves, let's get the basics of your hair care routine down and it starts with your wash routine.

Ideally, you should wash your hair no more than three times a week. This will also change depending on your hair type and activity.

For instance, if you love your hot yoga classes or find yourself using a lot more product for styling, your hair may get oily quicker because of sweat and build-up, so our advice is to be flexible with your hair wash routine depending on your schedule.

Generally speaking, if you have dry hair, shampoo twice a week. If you have thick or curly hair washing twice a week also works, as natural oils from the scalp don't get to the hair shaft as quick as those with fine hair.

Ladies with oily hair can wash three times a week.

Drying and Styling Your Hair

Now that washing is out of the way, how about drying? Soak up excess water with a microfibre towel and avoid rubbing your hair between non-microfibre towels.

If using a hair dryer or diffuser, apply hair protection first and dry accordingly. A paddle brush or round brush can be used if trying to style the hair.

If you have time or will be lounging around the house, apply a spritz of styling product and allow your hair to air dry. Limiting your hair's exposure to heat as much as possible will help protect the health and integrity of it.

If using a flat iron or a curling wand, depending on the style you want do so after the hairdryer. Heat protector should be applied and depending on the porosity of your hair apply styling product before and after to set the style.

If you want waves or curls to stay overnight, loosely pin them around your head so you're ready in the morning.

Summary

Building a hair care routine is all about determining what your hair needs and treating it as such.

It doesn't have to be complicated and most hair care routines will follow, wash, dry, style and treatment steps.

The frequency of your hair washing, drying and protecting it from excess heat and adding any extras as needed make for an easy to follow hair care routine for healthier hair.

Essentially, it means when you look after your hair, it will reward you with more good hair days than bad!

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