Tag Archives: hair

Jolie Magazine- rate The Studio

Jolie Magazine is hip, flirtatious and fabulously informative featuring topics on celebrities, fashion, shopping, spas, wellness and so much more. Jolie has the information you want to know.  

Share Your Thoughts

Check out Red Creative Art Concept Studio at Jolie Magazine. Rate the page-support the magazine and The Studio by logging onto www.jolie-magazine.com and join the Jolie family. Once you sign up, go to Beauty, Beauty Directory, scroll down to Red Studio and rate. To fully enjoy the benefits of Jolie Magazine, you must join.  If you choose not to join, the direct page to rate The Studio is http://74.54.207.107/.  Scroll down to Featured Businesses and share your thoughts.

Beauty Myth Busters

Source: Natural Solutions- Vibrant Health- Balanced Living Magazine; Natural Radiance Section-Solutions for healthy good looks

Oil Not your Oily Skin

It seems completely counterintuitive, but oil is no foe of oily skin-it is, in fact, a necessity.  According to ayurveda, many people with oily skin actually suffer from dehydrated skin as well.  The key to clear skin? Separating the good oils from the bad to restore balance for a glowing-not greasy-complexion.

People with oily skin often try to wash away excess oil with harsh cleansers containing benzoyl peroxide.  This may remove the unwanted excess oil, called sebum, but it also strips away beneficial oils, namely the lipids that promote healthy, well-hydrated skin.  Once these are gone and the skin dries out, a back-lash begins as the skin overcompensates by producing even more sebum. 

So as scary as it may sound, women with oily skin should reach for products that contain naturally derived, lightweight, and noncomedongenic (won’t clog pores) oils.  Apricot kernel oil, safflower oil, and sweet almond oil regulate sebum production while kukui nut (from the candlenut tree, which has seeds rich in oil) and macadamia oils help protect lipids.

A Moisturizing Shampoo Repairs Split Ends.

Sorry, but you have only one way to get rid of split ends: a good  haircut. So before you buy a posse of shampoos and conditioners, first  pick up the phone and call your stylist. “Hair, in a nutshell, is dead,” says Patane. “Once it is damaged, there is no way to repair it other than trimming it off.”

Split ends are the frayed fibers of the hair’s inner cortex which comes surrounded by protective cuticles. When hair becomes overly dry or otherwise damaged, the cuticle can’t do its job of keeping the fiber flat, and it appears as though it’s peeled away from the hair shaft.  You can’t repair this; nor will the cuticle and fiber grow back together.  But you can take steps to prevent and camouflage split ends, For prevention, eat a diet rich in essential fatty acids (like guacamole and salmon) and use a light hand when styling (no hard brushing of wet hair and fewer blow drying and heat curling sessions).

The next-best option: Mask the appearance of the split ends.  Hair serums and deep-conditioning treatments help plump up stressed cuticles with soy and vegetable proteins that fill in the gaps and also help prevent further breakage.  Other natural body building ingredients include ginseng root and spirulina, as well as the latest hair-strengthening all-star, creatin.  “Products with these ingredients can be very effective, but they offer a visual fix, not an actual fix,” Patane says. “To really keep split ends in check, see your hair stylist once every six to eight weeks.”

 

The Best Hair Towel Around

How often have you found yourself wringing and wringing and wringing your hair dry- for it to still be wet and frizzy on top of that. Problem solved. I’ve found the best hair towel around.  Imagine a towel made specifically to dry your hair. A towel  with fibers that are finer than silk, remarkably light, soft to the touch, and pampers the hair and body. This towel absorbs moisture more quickly and thoroughly than ordinary cotton towels, dramatically reducing the time to blow dry your hair. The hair towel also wraps easily into a turban and is comfortably light. 

This wonder towel is made of Aquitex, an innovative fabric woven from ultra-fine microfibers to create a lightweight material with superior wicking capabilities, more surface area for greater absorption and a soft luxurious feel.

To purchase your hair towel, call The Studio 718-221-5581.  

“My Hair Doesn’t Grow”

Not true! Hair growth is a constant process for everybody.  The average rate of growth is one half inch per month and up to six or eight inches a year.  The average head has 120,000 strands of hair, and we normally lose from 50 to 100 hairs daily, so over time the mane thins out as we age.

Why is the no-growth myth so prevalent in the community? Quite simply, chemicals, heat implements, and overuse of tools, even simply combing and brushing, cause hair to break.  And hair growth is not as noticeable on tightly curled hair, thus we never seem to gain any appreciable length.

Passage from Essence Total Makeover Body, Beauty, Spirit- Introduction by Susan L. Taylor, Patricia Mignon Hinds, Editor

 

Help me reach my goal “One Million Strong”- The Fabulous P.C. L. Family

Join me as I go forth calling on one million strong. One million strong that want a new leaf on life and a new way to think about their hair.

Join us in celebration of beautiful, healthy hair. Join us as we declare a healthy body. Join us as we gain a new respect for our very special selves. Join us as we validate that loving yourself could never be wrong.

Join me as I ask you to tell your friends, family members, loved ones, Pastor’s, doctors, classmates, co-workers and others to join The Fabulous P.C.L. (Pray, Cherish Your Body, Love Your Hair) Family. Share this blog with others so we may grow by leaps and bounds. Help me make this a reality. Join now, pass it along, one million strong!

To join the movement, please leave a comment and your name. Till soon,dhb.

Stop Tryin’ To Act Brand New- you are not trying to touch my hair are you?

Head snaps to the side, eye squinted and blaring as your hand goes up to grab the hand that’s touching your hair.  Remember back in the day, if you dare extend your hand to touch another persons hair unsolicited-you would surely pull back a nub in the mist of being “cursed out”.  So please, “Stop Trying to Act Brand New (nina)- you know better! Ask first- excuse me, your hair is so…. may I touch it? As directed, if directed you may proceed.

*only in this era would I have to write such a thing, dhb.