Anonymous wrote:I have a friend that swears by Dry Bar and her hair looks great when she has an appointment.
I get frequent blow outs and have found that the Hair Cuttery does a pretty good job! My hair is very thick, wavy/curly, and long so it is quite the process and they do charge me more but it is still quite reasonable at $26.
I also recently purchased a straightener from a mall kiosk and I love it! I NEVER would have given it a chance but I happen to use a friend's one day and that is where she purchased it. I checked it out myself, loved what the sales person was able to do, and have been able to easily recreate the same look.
Anonymous wrote:to pp with great advice- what dry shampoo do you use/recommend?
Anonymous wrote:
But I still can't imagine going to just get it blown out. Mainly because I've never had a stylist blow my hair out so I like it. They always make it look weird. I can never tell if I like my haircut until after I go home and redo it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm curious to know who uses this type of service. Are you a working professional getting a blow out during lunch break? A SAHWife?
There was already a thread on this. And if you really cannot figure out why someone whether its a teen, working mom, or SAHM would want this service thats ridiculous.
It's not ridiculous. Does one have a party tonight and need to get their hair styled? I can understand that. If not, once you go to bed tonight, won't the style get ruined?
Anonymous wrote:Can you walk in or do you need to make an appt?
A good blow out will even survive bed hair. You can use dry shampoo if you feel your hair is too oily.
This all depends on your hair type of course, but generally, you shouldn't be washing your hair every day.
If I get a blow out today (wishful thinking), it should last me until Monday. I would use dry shampoo on Saturday, maybe wash some front pieces and dry them. I would blow dry my hair briefly after a shower (like maybe a minute or two) to make sure all the dry shampoo is out.
Honestly, sometimes blowouts look better a few days out as they look more natural.
Some people think wrapping your hair in a towel during a shower keeps the style longer as shower caps hold in humidity. And as everyone in the DC area knows, humidity makes your hair frizz. I either clip it up and keep my hair out of the direct stream of water (and blowdry briefly), or put on a hilariously ugly shower cap I bought at like safeway for 99 cents.
I'll sprinkle on some dry shampoo before my shower and leave it in my hair during my shower. I keep my showers brief during this time (no hiding from the kids while the husband is on duty, haha). Once I'm out of the shower, I leave the shower as soon as possible to avoid as much humidity as I can. I then brush my hair, and then will briefly blow it out, making sure the last of the dry shampoo is out and it's nice and straight again. This process sounds like it takes a long time, but it maybe takes 5 minutes.
Just my two cents. Hope it helps.