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would you take hair advise from this lady?

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Would u take hair advice from this lady?

  • yes

    Votes: 8 6.4%
  • h3LL to tha no!!!

    Votes: 117 93.6%

  • Total voters
    125
  • Poll closed .

ANUBIS

New Member
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Im not trying to be mean but i was going an image search on google and this woman was linked to this article about rinsing out olive oil from your hair:nono: Since this pic is from a public site I didnt think it would be a problem to post it.

PLEASE READ HER ARTICLE FIRST THE THREAD IS BASED ON WHAT SHE WROTE...

http://www.ehow.com/how_4472342_get-olive-oil-out-hair.html
:naughty::axehunter:
 
Last edited:
I'll take no for $400 Alex

See her reasoning regarding removal of Olive Oil


Olive oil is useful for many things besides cooking. You can use olive oil to help soften your hair, and it also makes also a great home treatment to kill lice. The problem is that olive oil is very thick and heavy. It can saturate your hair and make it very greasy. Luckily, there are some secrets to get the olive oil out of your hair

Rinse all the olive oil out of your hair as best you can. Then apply enough Dawn to lather your hair. After lathering your hair, rinse with water. Keeping rinsing your hair until the water runs clear. (The problem with Dawn is that it's such an effective grease-cutter that it tends to strip your hair of all the oils, so don't do this every day.)

:nono:
 
She is telling People to use DAWN on their hair. Then you are conteractive in their approach to softer hair. Why use the olive oil then use a harsh soap to wash it out.

Strange. But look at her hair.
 
Use Dawn...I don't think so. So there is no other shampoo to use in place of Dawn. I can't believe she has a WHOLE article. I stopped reading after a few sentences.

Not to mention did YALL see HER hair :nono:
 
Trying to stay positive so I stayed with the objective of reading what she wrote. Trying not to comment about the hair and hair line.

Not sure how the leap from shampoo to Dawn was made but again, keeping it positive.
 
I think that some stylist are more concerned about their clients hair than their own, or they tend to lack on care for their own hair. When I did a search some time ago on how to rinse beewax out of hair, I saw dawn all over the place. Her advice does make alot of sense because when you think about, either you need to wash your hair with VERY HOT water to melt the oil (which would give you major burns and a run to emergency) or use something that will be strong enough to strip the moisture from your hair of which then you will need to immediately follow with a deep moisture conditioner to put the moisture back in your hair.

However Dawn is not the only solution. When I was dealing with the beeswax issue (yrs ago I used it on my natural hair to define my curls and didnt realize it was going to be a HUGE pain to rinse out!) so while I was in the kitchen bawling my eyes out, my husband ran to Target and asked a lady who was working in that department and she suggested a clarifying shampoo...particularly Pantene. My husband came home with the Pantene and I thought, "Oh hell no, that isnt going to get this crap out of my hair!" I tried it anyway and after just ONE wash and rinse, that stuff came right out of my hair, I was sooo happy and relieved I used nothing but Pantene products for the next several months.

Keyword : PANTENE CLARIFYING SHAMPOO...it works ;)
 
I feel sorry for her hair and those hairs under her care. I pray that she do a google search and find LHCF.
 
Dawn:blush:, why is she even writting an article about how to get olive oil out of hair anyway, are hair needs moisture, if its too greasy then rinse your hair with water or do a light shampoo:look:
 
my best friend from high school used dawn to wash her hair...i dont' know if she still does this but she did it because it got all the oil out of her hair...so this isn't the first time i've heard of using dish soap to wash your hair :hide:
 
I'll take no for $400 Alex

See her reasoning regarding removal of Olive Oil


Olive oil is useful for many things besides cooking. You can use olive oil to help soften your hair, and it also makes also a great home treatment to kill lice. The problem is that olive oil is very thick and heavy. It can saturate your hair and make it very greasy. Luckily, there are some secrets to get the olive oil out of your hair

Rinse all the olive oil out of your hair as best you can. Then apply enough Dawn to lather your hair. After lathering your hair, rinse with water. Keeping rinsing your hair until the water runs clear. (The problem with Dawn is that it's such an effective grease-cutter that it tends to strip your hair of all the oils, so don't do this every day.)

:nono:



I love your "Jeopardy" responses! They crack me up!
 
It depends. My hair hair looks like that now but I'm natural and pulled it back. The lady's hair doesn't look so bad to me. But I would not take her advice.
 
ummmmm its not hard at all to wash oil out of your hair. coconut oil, evoo, avocado oil even castor oil gest washed out of my hair with CONDITIONER or very little all natural of sulfate free shampoo. its not that serious. if your hair hates oil and you need to use something harsh to get it out, then you shouldnt use it in the first place. it defeats the purpose of having soft hair anyway. i co wash daily and i can slather my hair in oil and it wont take but a little conditioner to get it out.
even before i knew about good hair practices you couldnt pay me to use dish detergent on my hair.
 
How much olive oil do you have to put in your hair anyway if you're going to have to wash it with Dawn dishliquid and if that doesn't work: Prell, vinegar, corn startch, baking soda, and baby shampoo. How is she going to give someone hair advice?
 
:lachen:is she trying to bake cookies or what

  1. Step 4
    Use baking soda and baby shampoo for another option. Mix a little baking soda with just a little bit of baby shampoo. Put the mixture on your hair while it is dry, then wash with warm water. Repeat until all the olive oil is gone.
  2. Step 5
    Try Prell. First, pat your hair with paper towels to soak up excess olive oil, then massage Prell into your hair. Add just a little warm water. Rinse. Repeat until all the olive oil is gone.
  3. Step 6
    Use cornstarch. Sprinkle a little cornstarch on your hair and pat it in. This will help absorb some of the oil. Rinse with a clarifying shampoo.
 
:lachen:is she trying to bake cookies or what

  1. Step 4
    Use baking soda and baby shampoo for another option. Mix a little baking soda with just a little bit of baby shampoo. Put the mixture on your hair while it is dry, then wash with warm water. Repeat until all the olive oil is gone.
  2. Step 5
    Try Prell. First, pat your hair with paper towels to soak up excess olive oil, then massage Prell into your hair. Add just a little warm water. Rinse. Repeat until all the olive oil is gone.
  3. Step 6
    Use cornstarch. Sprinkle a little cornstarch on your hair and pat it in. This will help absorb some of the oil. Rinse with a clarifying shampoo.


OMG you are wrong for that.... :lachen:
 
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