PassionFruit
New Member
if your ears werent ever scabby from a hot com
b "oops", you aint ever lived





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Yep this took me back too!! Once I started doing my hair thats when it went downhill!!! I guess we had more of a "leave it be" mentality back then... of course with lots of grease added in!!!
if your ears werent ever scabby from a hot comb "oops", you aint ever lived
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I can attest to this (braids or flat twists=low mani and hair grease). This is my 8 year old. She's natural, APL, unstretched (in the back). I haven't straightened her hair in about a year so I have no idea how long it really is.
http://public.fotki.com/brownbabydoll25/my-baby-girl/
ETA: I still grease her scalp with yellow "hair food". It ain't broke, ain't I'm not gonna fix it!
Today I was riding the train to work and a sista with a couple of little girls boarded. They were cute as buttons, about 5 and 7 years old and they wore their shiny, healthy long hair is well manicured pigtails. It took me back to my childhood and I realized my hair was pretty long back then. When I got to high school, I started doing it myself and it started to break off and get dry.
I thought I'd share this thread because there is a lot to learn from the way our mommas/aunties took care of our hair. These methods were inexpensive and *gasp* they worked. Feel free to add to the list:
We have gotten so sophisticated since then. Glancing around the products we use today (quite a few are really pricey), the fancy spendy equipment (PIBBS, Sedus, Chi's), we have moved hair care to another level. For the most part, it's a good thing -- I don't think any of us have a hankering for greasy straight hair that does not move!
- Exclusively protective styles during the day. Pony tails in number from 2 to infinity were the doo of the day. Each adorned with pretty bows or baubbles.
- Hair washed every week, combed out into little bantu knots to dry overnight.
- Hair pressed a day after wash day, with lots of grease (Hey remember petroleum based pressing grease? it worked back then *gasp*)
- At night, hair put up in a protective style and a scarf tightly wrapped around our little heads. No scarf on the pillow in the morning!
- God forbid we had the opportunity to really show hair length. I never remember wearing my hair down!
On the other hand, there is a lot to learn from old school methods. Just trying to keep things in perspective.
I loved reading your posts. Walk down memory lane. The neck/ear burns, the petroleum ladden grease (my mom used Bergamont), the flinching during the press. This was TORTURE for me. I did not look forward to press day.
But it begs the question -- why did it work for most of us? Low manipulation despite the GREASE? It really scares me to think that those products were so greasy they were WATER REPELLENT.![]()
Oh yes this definitely brings it all back for me. I was the same way with the washings and pressings too. My mom would press my hair with that grease in the small blue or red container with a silver tin top. Can't remember the name of it though. All I know it's petroleumMy hair was pretty long then too, but I can't say that if I was to do the same things now as my mom has done, if it would get back down my back. But never know!
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I was the kid everyone laughed at... I literally looked like Kizzy the Slave until the "California Curl" came out... my mother didnt know how to braid/cornrow... so I had these big 1872 plaits with big bows on em
cept on special occasions when I went to the beauty parlor where this 90 yr old lady managed to make a 8 yr old look like Rosa Parks and dared me to mess it up
I totally agree with everything you just said. My hair broke off when I starting care for it myself also. I've said this before in other threads and i'll say it again here: My mother thought i was standing over her shoulder when i was sitting on the floor in front of her at the same time. She said she thought I knew how to do it. NOT.
You know some of ya'lls posts also reminded of something..........
Did ya'll, who got pressed, ever sit on top of a BIG OLE Cooking pot on a chair???Ohhhh I did, cuz I was too darn short.
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Couldn't agree more with everybody here! My hair used to be pretty long natural and relaxed. It wasn't until I started doing my own hair at 13 that it went down hill!
Today I was riding the train to work and a sista with a couple of little girls boarded. They were cute as buttons, about 5 and 7 years old and they wore their shiny, healthy long hair is well manicured pigtails. It took me back to my childhood and I realized my hair was pretty long back then. When I got to high school, I started doing it myself and it started to break off and get dry.
I thought I'd share this thread because there is a lot to learn from the way our mommas/aunties took care of our hair. These methods were inexpensive and *gasp* they worked. Feel free to add to the list:
We have gotten so sophisticated since then. Glancing around the products we use today (quite a few are really pricey), the fancy spendy equipment (PIBBS, Sedus, Chi's), we have moved hair care to another level. For the most part, it's a good thing -- I don't think any of us have a hankering for greasy straight hair that does not move!
- Exclusively protective styles during the day. Pony tails in number from 2 to infinity were the doo of the day. Each adorned with pretty bows or baubbles.
- Hair washed every week, combed out into little bantu knots to dry overnight.
- Hair pressed a day after wash day, with lots of grease (Hey remember petroleum based pressing grease? it worked back then *gasp*)
- At night, hair put up in a protective style and a scarf tightly wrapped around our little heads. No scarf on the pillow in the morning!
- God forbid we had the opportunity to really show hair length. I never remember wearing my hair down!
On the other hand, there is a lot to learn from old school methods. Just trying to keep things in perspective.
Apex Pressing Oil.
I don't care what the naysayers say 'bout grease and oil...I love this stuff!!![]()
Daphae,
Your daughter's hair is gawgous. *sigh*
OMG! OP you just brought back some memories. I used to sit on phone books. My hair was soo think and apl growing up.
I do the same thing with my DD except I do not press it,she would scream bloody murder. She is 6. Her hair get washed every other week and put in plaits. I freshen up her hair midweek and leave it alone.
What is key here ladies is the low manipulation.
[/b]
ITA!
I was the kid everyone laughed at... I literally looked like Kizzy the Slave until the "California Curl" came out... my mother didnt know how to braid/cornrow... so I had these big 1872 plaits with big bows on em
cept on special occasions when I went to the beauty parlor where this 90 yr old lady managed to make a 8 yr old look like Rosa Parks and dared me to mess it up
I was the kid everyone laughed at... I literally looked like Kizzy the Slave until the "California Curl" came out... my mother didnt know how to braid/cornrow... so I had these big 1872 plaits with big bows on em
cept on special occasions when I went to the beauty parlor where this 90 yr old lady managed to make a 8 yr old look like Rosa Parks and dared me to mess it up