blackberry815
Well-Known Member
I'm just curious because it is heat... and I have the same question about the steamer... Can't this cause the strand to boil from within? I think I remember reading something about that a while back... Any insight?
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Maybe... That could be true... My steamer does get pretty hot though.. It may not boil it but it could have some effect... Think about when u steam vegetables.. It doesn't boil them but it still cooks them up somewhat...I do notice that my hairdresser never puts me under a dryer to deep condition she just puts the plastic cap on and leaves it on maybe 30-45 minutes... My hair always comes out so much better when she does it. I will start paying attention to what the deep conditioner says to do. Thanks ladies
Kind of OT, but what I don't understand is how a hooded dryer is considered indirect heat while a blowdryer isn't. Now obviously if you're using a comb attachment or something and holding the blowdryer directly on your hair it's comparable to a flat iron, but most people hold their dryer a good ways away? Also even the lowest setting on my hooded dryer gets hotter than what I would usually use my handheld dryer at.
Wow... Yea I know no one conditions with boiling hot conditioner. That wasn't the question that I asked.. Obviously no one is going to put boiling hot anything on their hair. Its good to be sarcastic sometimes though I guess... The reason I asked is because that is what happens when people get heat damage or style damp hair with hot tools. Like I said that is something I read about and was curious to see if that could happen with deep conditioning or steam.
This is why I don't understand diffusing...Although the diffuser "spreads" the heat out, most people still hold the diffuser in one spot for a period of time...and the diffuser is still closer to your hair than a hooded dryer.I consider hood dryers indirect heat since the heat isn't being concentrated on any one part of your hair.
With a blow dryer, you get this rush of hot hair pointed directly at a certain portion of your hair. And when you consider that many professional blow dryers have wattages equivalent to if not greater than many hood dryers, that's alot of freaking heat.
With a hood dryer, you essentially put your head into a chamber where warm air is being blown in and circulated around your head. As long as the bonnet is the right side for your head and your hair isn't pressed up against the vents, then I feel a hood dryer really is much gentler.
This is why I don't understand diffusing...Although the diffuser "spreads" the heat out, most people still hold the diffuser in one spot for a period of time...and the diffuser is still closer to your hair than a hooded dryer.
How Do Blow Dryer Diffusers Work?
What a Diffuser Is
A diffuser is an attachment applied to the end of a hair dryer. It is generally rounded and features several long, rod-like pieces. A diffuser is most often used when drying curly or wavy hair because of the special properties this hair type has. A hair diffuser also may be used if you have heat-damaged hair because a diffuser is generally considered to be less damaging to the hair. When a diffuser is attached to the hair dryer and then turns on, the air circulates or diffuses around the curl, instead of being blown straight onto it.
Curly Hair Properties
Curly hair dries in the opposite manner that straight hair does. For example, when wet, curly hair tends to be straight in appearance. It then uses the moisture from the water to absorb into the hair and contract to create curls. Conversely, when straight hair dries, it must shed moisture to be straight. This is why using a diffuser works for those with frizzy or curly hair. If those with this hair type used a regular hair dryer with no nozzle attachment, the hair has a tendency to become frizzy in appearance because the hair was not able to retain fully the moisture it needs to curl fully. Also, extreme amounts of heat applied directly to the hair can break down the chemical bonds, causing the hair to relax. A diffuser is often used on a low heat setting, which allows curly hair to retain its chemical bonds, preventing the hair from relaxing and appearing frizzy.
Applying a Diffuser
When a diffuser is applied to wet hair, the air circulates around the curl. This allows it to mimic the properties of air drying curly hair, which results in more clearly defined curls. Using a diffuser often takes a longer time to dry the hair than using a standard hair dryer might. However, the hair appears softer and less frizzy. Diffusers often are helpful in adding volume to flat hair. The diffuser's rods help to separate the hair better, which gives it an added lift and adds volume for a fuller effect. Drying the hair upside down while using the diffuser also will help to separate the roots of the hair more for an added boost.
How Do Blow Dryer Diffusers Work? | LIVESTRONG.COM
Boiling water and steam are two different things. Water boils at 212°F, steam is produced above that...
For a steamer, I can't say, but I'm sure no one DCs with boiling hot condtioner.
mzteaze Steam is produced at the same time water is boiling. Boiling point is the point at which a liquid turns to vapor.
Aviah Let's consider bubble hair. This has been explained as something that happens when liquid that has been absorbed by hair reaches its boiling point. Now one thing to note is the boiling point of water is 212 degrees F, ONLY if the water is pure. Impurities will lower the boiling point of a liquid.
What makes a liquid turn to vapor is that the pressure within the liquid gets greater than that in the air. When things get hot, they expand and so the molecules in the liquid spread out and bonds between them break and they turn into vapor. Hot air has a lower pressure than cold air which is why when you blow dry your hair it dries even though the water in your hair doesn't reach boiling point. In other words, when you blow dry hair, hot air around the hair having low pressure causes the water on the hair to turn to vapor at a lower temperature because the low pressure above it makes it easy for water molecules to expand and separate into vapor form. This could explain why bubble air forms even when the hair doesn't reach the boiling point of water. The hair may not get to 212 degrees F (100 degrees C), but because the air around the hair is warm, the moisture inside it still reaches a point at which it would turn into vapor. This happens when you blow dry hair.
When it comes to steaming or DCing with heat (under a cap) it is less clear because the presence of steam inside the cap or the steaming "bowl" means the pressure around the hair is kept high. So whether the conditioner+water in and on the hair has a BP below that of steam to the point of making it turn to vapor, I dunno--coz remember impurities do make water boil at a lower temp and heat does cause a low pressure in the space around the hair also making BP lower. But I would say there's a greater chance of bubble hair and hence damage happening from blow drying hair with a hot dryer to dry it than from steaming or from DCing with heat and a cap.
I guess you learn something new everyday! The way I came across understanding bubble hair is through people flat ironing wet hair, causing the hair to boil in the shaft, weakening the cortex. Thus why I couldn't understand why DCing might do it- it just never gets that hot.
Still for some reason I think adding other things into water makes it boil at a higher temperature. I have no evidence for this though...
A little late to reply, but I found this intresting because I stopped conditioning with heat due the damage it was causing to my hair. I am not sure how and why; I just know that my hair doesn't like it!