8 more hair mistakes you may be making

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Combing Wet Hair from Roots to Ends

A comb is easier on fragile wet hair than a brush is, but tugging it from scalp to tips can cause breakage. First, smooth out knots with a leave-in detangler. Then, says Marin, start to comb at ends, working up in sections.

Brushing Your Hair for Shine

All you need is a few strokes to style hair and spread the natural oils from roots to ends. "Anything more than that is unnecessary friction, which can lead to breakage," says Amy J. McMichael, M.D., an associate professor of dermatology at Wake Forest University School of Medicine, in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.

Blow-Drying Hair That's Dripping Wet

Not only will this make it difficult to style your hair, it will cause a ton of heat damage. "A blow dryer should be used on damp — not wet — hair for 20 minutes, tops," says stylist Peter Coppola, creator of a QVC hair-care line. Before applying heat, wrap hair in a towel for five minutes, then let hair air-dry for another five.

Ignoring Your Scalp

To grow healthy hair, your scalp needs nourishment. "Massaging your head with your fingertips will stimulate blood flow," says Christopher Mackin, a trichologist (hair expert) at the Gil Ferrer Salon, in New York City. For extra care, use a leave-in scalp treatment.

Using the Wrong Brush

The incorrect brush can not only ruin your style, it can get snagged in your hair. Generally, the longer your locks, the larger in diameter your brush should be (basically, more hair, more brush). To create volume, use a round brush; to smooth hair, a paddle shape is best.

Avoiding Hair Spray

It's gotten a bad rap, but hair spray contains a polymer that actually locks out humidity, says Cheri McMaster, senior scientist for Pantene. And contrary to popular belief, it's not harmful. "It's the polymer, not the alcohol, that dries on your hair," she says. "The alcohol evaporates before it hits your head." Use just enough to hold your style.

Masking — Not Treating — Dandruff

Trying to nix flakes with moisturizing stylers like oils and pomades is only a temporary fix: Dandruff is actually an inflammatory scalp disease unrelated to dryness, says Dr. McMichael. The cure? A shampoo with salicylic acid, zinc, selenium sulfide or tar to eliminate flakes.

8 Hair Mistakes You May Be Making - Â* Beauty & Fashion - MSN Lifestyle

 
Hmmm... I'm not guilty of any of them... But, why would I want to use hairspray to hold a "non-existent" style?

 
good to know
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I used to not towel dry my hair cause I heard it was bad to keep it wrapped in a towel, and obviously rubbing it dry makes it frizzy, but I started doing it again. Now it only takes me a 1/2 hour to blowdry and straighten. Instead of almost 2hrs. Also another thing I started to do is shower at night so that my hair is pretty much dry by the morning and all I have to do is straighten it.

 
Hah! Well it's nice to hear that the tons of hairspray that I use on a daily basis can actually be beneficial!! Thanks for the article.

 
Thankx I used to blow dry mi hair when it was drippin wet but noww i wont =D

 
not guilty
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i learned some if this stuff myself, and my hairdresser once told me to always, always detangle my wet hair with a comb, not a brush. i'm also very careful to blot my hair iwth a dry towel before detangling and always wait before drying it with the blowdryer.

it is also very important to detangle your hair starting from the ends (divided by sections especially if you have long hair) then moving up. i found the other way hurts the roots and kills the volume.

 
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