Faith said:You rock Thanks for the post. I have a question for you..kind of OT. Would you recommend a porosity conditioner to the ends of ones hair before a relaxer? I'm thinking of applying my CON prosity conditioner to the relaxed ends before I touch up the roots. Thanks
devin said:great info Sista!! Thanks again for the wonderful and informative post! You are going to have us seriously educated on hair. I have a question. I have porosity control and rarely use it. It seems that my hair has some porous issues. How much acv do you mix in the water and does it matter what type of water you use? Also when do you use the acv rinse, before shampooing or after deep conditioning? Do you know anything about porosity control? If so, when would I use it? Thanks in advance!
metalkitty said:How intermeresting and informative! Thanks so much for posting this, you guru! I'm a little confused about this one thing though, when I use Porosity Control or ACV rinses my hair feels so healthy (moisturized, doesn't break as much) but it dries much quicker... Is this a bad thing???
bklynwildheart said:Thanx sista for this wealth of info!
Hmmm, me thinks this thread should be stickied...
ThanksSistaslick said:That doesn't sound bad at all to me. It would protect the ends of the hair from overprocessing and reduce any extreme porosity problems that may be already on those ends. I'd do it
Sistaslick said:I've never personally used Roux's porosity control, I usually just go with ACV rinses for correcting my own porosity issues. A really good Roux's porosity control thread was bumped recently so you can check that one out for some reviews and techniques using that particular product. ;up: My ACV rinse mix is usually 1/4 ACV in 2 cups of regular cool water. I do it as a final rinse after a deep conditioning. Some like to do it before the conditioning step b/c ACV tends to be a little "odor-rific" It still works well either way. If your hair comes out hard/tangly following the rinse, your ACV is not diluted enough and you need to add more water to the rinse. Your wet hair should gleam, be smooth, and tangle free.
Sistaslick said:You guys are too nice to me.
and Jazzy, you could--- the only thing is that neutralizing poos tend to be really strippy, strippy . . . they aren't really the most moisturizing of shampoos if you know what I mean. I actually tried that after I permanently colored my hair last year because it just felt so dry, rough, and puffy-- and wasn't staying moisturized even after doing some protein conditioning and sticking to a high moisture/deep conditioning regimen. I knew then that it had to be a porosity problem. I was thinking like you and figured, heeey let me try this neutralizing poo (Isoplus), and surprisingly it helped me a great deal. If you do it only occasionally, I don't see the harm in that-- but for a regular porosity maintenance program, I would probably just go with a moisturizing poo and an ACV rinse.