Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love the Revlon thingy and just wish they made a smaller barrel version. The large barrel works with a lot of hair quickly, but I think a smaller barrel would get closer to the scalp. Either way, I love it.
Have you tried the teal one (v2 or something on Amazon, still revlon). It’s smaller.
Sorry, 2.0 not v2
Oh, you rock! I didn't know that existed. Thank you so much!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You absolutely cannot use this on wet hair. Get Redken One United spray for her hair, then do a rough blow dry to get it 80% dry. FINISH with the Revlon tool to get it smooth and straight. I repeat again, no matter what any rando on this board claims they do, DO NOT use it on wet hair to dry the hair. It will cause extreme damage.
Not if you have thick, coarse, curly hair like me. I use it on wet hair and it works great for me!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I use the Tresseme heat spray and use this every 4-5 washes:
https://www.sephora.com/product/color-wow-dream-coat-supernatural-spray-anti-frizz-treatment-P469065
Don’t forget the Revlon dryer is best used on hair that is about 70-80% dry.
I started using this spray about a month ago based on a recommendation here (another thread - maybe this PP) and wow it’s made a huge difference!
Unless you have thin and highly resilient hair please do not use on soaking wet hair - it would take forever and get way way too hot
Anonymous wrote:I use the Tresseme heat spray and use this every 4-5 washes:
https://www.sephora.com/product/color-wow-dream-coat-supernatural-spray-anti-frizz-treatment-P469065
Don’t forget the Revlon dryer is best used on hair that is about 70-80% dry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love the Revlon thingy and just wish they made a smaller barrel version. The large barrel works with a lot of hair quickly, but I think a smaller barrel would get closer to the scalp. Either way, I love it.
Have you tried the teal one (v2 or something on Amazon, still revlon). It’s smaller.
Sorry, 2.0 not v2
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love the Revlon thingy and just wish they made a smaller barrel version. The large barrel works with a lot of hair quickly, but I think a smaller barrel would get closer to the scalp. Either way, I love it.
Have you tried the teal one (v2 or something on Amazon, still revlon). It’s smaller.
Anonymous wrote:I love the Revlon thingy and just wish they made a smaller barrel version. The large barrel works with a lot of hair quickly, but I think a smaller barrel would get closer to the scalp. Either way, I love it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You absolutely cannot use this on wet hair. Get Redken One United spray for her hair, then do a rough blow dry to get it 80% dry. FINISH with the Revlon tool to get it smooth and straight. I repeat again, no matter what any rando on this board claims they do, DO NOT use it on wet hair to dry the hair. It will cause extreme damage.
I asked you this on a different thread - but what's the point? I thought people use this hair dryer to save time, but what you're doing doesn't seem like it would save any time at all. I'd rather just keep using my regular hair dryer and finish with a round brush then have to spend the time switching tools and have to find the space for two different hair dryers. It seems dumb to do this! Do you not know how to straighten your hair with a round brush? Is that the issue? It's really not hard.
NP - yes, and you were rude on the other thread too.
I’m the PP of that comment and I have no idea who she thinks I am when she says “I asked you on a recent thread” as I have not conversed on any other threads about Revlon blow dryers or blowouts recently …
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You absolutely cannot use this on wet hair. Get Redken One United spray for her hair, then do a rough blow dry to get it 80% dry. FINISH with the Revlon tool to get it smooth and straight. I repeat again, no matter what any rando on this board claims they do, DO NOT use it on wet hair to dry the hair. It will cause extreme damage.
I asked you this on a different thread - but what's the point? I thought people use this hair dryer to save time, but what you're doing doesn't seem like it would save any time at all. I'd rather just keep using my regular hair dryer and finish with a round brush then have to spend the time switching tools and have to find the space for two different hair dryers. It seems dumb to do this! Do you not know how to straighten your hair with a round brush? Is that the issue? It's really not hard.
NP - yes, and you were rude on the other thread too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You absolutely cannot use this on wet hair. Get Redken One United spray for her hair, then do a rough blow dry to get it 80% dry. FINISH with the Revlon tool to get it smooth and straight. I repeat again, no matter what any rando on this board claims they do, DO NOT use it on wet hair to dry the hair. It will cause extreme damage.
I asked you this on a different thread - but what's the point? I thought people use this hair dryer to save time, but what you're doing doesn't seem like it would save any time at all. I'd rather just keep using my regular hair dryer and finish with a round brush then have to spend the time switching tools and have to find the space for two different hair dryers. It seems dumb to do this! Do you not know how to straighten your hair with a round brush? Is that the issue? It's really not hard.
NP - yes, and you were rude on the other thread too.
NP. I'm 12:15 from way upthread. I only use the Revlon dryer brush when I straighten my hair. I do not use any other tools. I have tried many times over the years to use a round brush and hair dryer, to no success. I've had friends try to straighten it that way to no success. Only professionals have enough skill and patience to straighten my thick hair. It is WAY easier to use one tool than two tools (brush and dryer) at the same time, especially when you need to pull the hair to dry it. The Revlon brush enables me to do that.
DP. Totally agree. I’ve tried the Dyson Airwrap and hated it. It took forever and simply wasn’t hot enough to give a really smooth, silky blowout. The Revlon was far superior for my hair. I use plenty of heat protectant and only blow dry once a week, so I’m not worried about damaging it more than it would be with a regular dryer and round brush. It takes no time at all to use the Revlon on my mostly air dried hair.
Not sure why there’s such a ridiculous argument about this - it works great for many of us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You absolutely cannot use this on wet hair. Get Redken One United spray for her hair, then do a rough blow dry to get it 80% dry. FINISH with the Revlon tool to get it smooth and straight. I repeat again, no matter what any rando on this board claims they do, DO NOT use it on wet hair to dry the hair. It will cause extreme damage.
I asked you this on a different thread - but what's the point? I thought people use this hair dryer to save time, but what you're doing doesn't seem like it would save any time at all. I'd rather just keep using my regular hair dryer and finish with a round brush then have to spend the time switching tools and have to find the space for two different hair dryers. It seems dumb to do this! Do you not know how to straighten your hair with a round brush? Is that the issue? It's really not hard.
NP - yes, and you were rude on the other thread too.
NP. I'm 12:15 from way upthread. I only use the Revlon dryer brush when I straighten my hair. I do not use any other tools. I have tried many times over the years to use a round brush and hair dryer, to no success. I've had friends try to straighten it that way to no success. Only professionals have enough skill and patience to straighten my thick hair. It is WAY easier to use one tool than two tools (brush and dryer) at the same time, especially when you need to pull the hair to dry it. The Revlon brush enables me to do that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You absolutely cannot use this on wet hair. Get Redken One United spray for her hair, then do a rough blow dry to get it 80% dry. FINISH with the Revlon tool to get it smooth and straight. I repeat again, no matter what any rando on this board claims they do, DO NOT use it on wet hair to dry the hair. It will cause extreme damage.
I asked you this on a different thread - but what's the point? I thought people use this hair dryer to save time, but what you're doing doesn't seem like it would save any time at all. I'd rather just keep using my regular hair dryer and finish with a round brush then have to spend the time switching tools and have to find the space for two different hair dryers. It seems dumb to do this! Do you not know how to straighten your hair with a round brush? Is that the issue? It's really not hard.
NP - yes, and you were rude on the other thread too.