Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Her hair is one of many things looking better. Her nose, teeth, cheeks, and chin all appear better. I wonder if she had that cheek fat removal procedure, plus chin and/or jaw injections to give her jaw a more chiseled look.
She’s had a lot of plastic surgery.
Anonymous wrote:Isn’t this common? Look at Sarah Jessica Parker, Nicole Kidman, Julie Roberts. I assume they either do blow outs or have had a straighten treatment like Brazilian blowout/keratin.
Anonymous wrote:Her hair is one of many things looking better. Her nose, teeth, cheeks, and chin all appear better. I wonder if she had that cheek fat removal procedure, plus chin and/or jaw injections to give her jaw a more chiseled look.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She was probably brushing it as a teen which is the worst thing you can do for curly/frizzy hair. My hair was completely different when I was in my teens, and I’m the same age as her.
This! My hair looked like hers at that age because I didn’t know how to deal with it. Good products, better cuts and never touching it with a brush (just a wide comb) and I have loose, soft curls and no frizz.
Unless a girl with frizz/curls has a mom with the same type of hair that teaches her how to care for it, she has to learn what works for curls/frizz through trial and error.
Yes! My mom had aggressively straight hair and didn’t know what to do with my curls. I’m a few years older thanChelsea and the hair product world is a very different place than it was 20+ years ago. My hair looked crazy and frizzy until my mid-20s when I finally learned how to style it.
aggressively straight hair.. what? Do you even know what words you are typing? You use the word "super" all the time, don't you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 11 year old DD has hair like this and I do not know what to do to. (I have straight hair.). I took her for a curly haircut and they sold us a bunch of products but her hair only looks good the day she washes it. It is frizzy the next day no matter what. Will take any suggestions for how to help her learn to deal with her hair!
Does she have high-density or low-density hair? If it is high-density you need to lock in the moisture into her hair because it doesn't naturally do it. Us a good co-wash like Wen's 613 or Wen's Fig. I only use 2 pumps. There are knock offs of the 613 but I think buying the original is worth it. I alternate both. Then when she is done and her hair is still wet use Vo5's hairdressing to lock in the moisture. You will be surprised how little you will need to use of it and it is cheap. I have tried so many other things cheap and expensive but I always come back to these products because they make my hair healthy. If she has high-density hair she may need to wash it everyday for the moisture.
I don't think you know what density refers to in regards to hair. High density is a head of hair that has a lot of hairs per square inch. Low density the opposite.
Anonymous wrote:My 11 year old DD has hair like this and I do not know what to do to. (I have straight hair.). I took her for a curly haircut and they sold us a bunch of products but her hair only looks good the day she washes it. It is frizzy the next day no matter what. Will take any suggestions for how to help her learn to deal with her hair!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 11 year old DD has hair like this and I do not know what to do to. (I have straight hair.). I took her for a curly haircut and they sold us a bunch of products but her hair only looks good the day she washes it. It is frizzy the next day no matter what. Will take any suggestions for how to help her learn to deal with her hair!
Does she have high-density or low-density hair? If it is high-density you need to lock in the moisture into her hair because it doesn't naturally do it. Us a good co-wash like Wen's 613 or Wen's Fig. I only use 2 pumps. There are knock offs of the 613 but I think buying the original is worth it. I alternate both. Then when she is done and her hair is still wet use Vo5's hairdressing to lock in the moisture. You will be surprised how little you will need to use of it and it is cheap. I have tried so many other things cheap and expensive but I always come back to these products because they make my hair healthy. If she has high-density hair she may need to wash it everyday for the moisture.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She was probably brushing it as a teen which is the worst thing you can do for curly/frizzy hair. My hair was completely different when I was in my teens, and I’m the same age as her.
This! My hair looked like hers at that age because I didn’t know how to deal with it. Good products, better cuts and never touching it with a brush (just a wide comb) and I have loose, soft curls and no frizz.
Unless a girl with frizz/curls has a mom with the same type of hair that teaches her how to care for it, she has to learn what works for curls/frizz through trial and error.
Yes! My mom had aggressively straight hair and didn’t know what to do with my curls. I’m a few years older thanChelsea and the hair product world is a very different place than it was 20+ years ago. My hair looked crazy and frizzy until my mid-20s when I finally learned how to style it.
Anonymous wrote:My 11 year old DD has hair like this and I do not know what to do to. (I have straight hair.). I took her for a curly haircut and they sold us a bunch of products but her hair only looks good the day she washes it. It is frizzy the next day no matter what. Will take any suggestions for how to help her learn to deal with her hair!
Anonymous wrote:Hormones can really have an impact; it's possible pregnancy changed the texture of her hair somewhat. I had hair just like hers as a kid and for much of my adult life (although I got much better at managing it; but honestly, I always liked my hair). But in my 40s it started to change, plus in perimenopause I have lost a TON of hair. Now in my early 50s it is less curly and I have much less hair in general, and honestly I have no idea what to do with it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She was probably brushing it as a teen which is the worst thing you can do for curly/frizzy hair. My hair was completely different when I was in my teens, and I’m the same age as her.
This! My hair looked like hers at that age because I didn’t know how to deal with it. Good products, better cuts and never touching it with a brush (just a wide comb) and I have loose, soft curls and no frizz.
Unless a girl with frizz/curls has a mom with the same type of hair that teaches her how to care for it, she has to learn what works for curls/frizz through trial and error.
Yes! My mom had aggressively straight hair and didn’t know what to do with my curls. I’m a few years older thanChelsea and the hair product world is a very different place than it was 20+ years ago. My hair looked crazy and frizzy until my mid-20s when I finally learned how to style it.
Anonymous wrote:
I'm part white, part Asian, and my straight hair suddenly became CURLY during puberty! I loved it! Sadly, it returned to its natural straight state as an adult. My teen son, who has an Asian father and is therefore 3/4 Asian, has wavy hair right now, when it was stick straight before - I told him to enjoy it because it's not going to last...
I assume that Chelsea had a super frizz episode as a teen, and as posters said, was making it worse by brushing. Now she's straightening, probably, but I suspect her natural hair is way less curly than it used to be.