How to find a good moturizer -- the answer is in here

Moisturizing hair is as important as deep conditioning to any black person who wishes to have long hair. As washing and deep conditioning the hair every day is quite impractical, a hair moisturizer is required to avoid dryness until the next wash.
Relaxed and natural black hair tends to be quite porous so loses moisture quickly. The key to long beautiful locks is to keep replacing the moisture lost. The easiest way to do this between washes is to use a good moisturizer.
First things first, let's deal with a common misconception about oil. Oil is not a moisturizer! Oil lubricates the hair and 'seals in' any moisture you already have in the hair. If your hair is dry and brittle and you apply oil to it then you are doing your hair more harm than good. The oil will coat the hair and prevent any further moisture from entering the hair which will lead to breakage.
The best moisturizers should always be water based i.e. the first ingredient should be water; water is in fact the best moisturizer! Good moisturizers should also contain humectants. These are ingredients which attract water from the atmosphere, glycerine being the most popular of these. Honey is also an excellent humectant but more commonly used in conditioners and not moisturizers.
Always avoid moisturizers that contain mineral oil or any other petroleum based product in the first few ingredients. Mineral oil does nothing but coat the hair leaving it shiny but dry.
You may find that the best conditioners are the ones that are marketed to 'wet type' styles (jheri curl or wave nouveau) as they contain mainly water and glycerine. S curl is particularly good.
How to use hair moisturizers is just as important as getting the right product. If you plan to blow dry or roller set your hair, after towel drying apply a dime sized amount of a water and glycerine based moisturizer before you apply the same amount of heat protectant and comb through hair to evenly distribute. After the blow dry or roller set your hair will be left soft and silky to the touch and will remain like this throughout the day. If you plan to flat iron it then only apply leave in conditioner and a silicone based heat protectant to the hair.
Moisturizers should then be applied daily or as needed. Only a dime sized amount is required for shoulder length hair. A touch more for longer hair. Always comb the moisturiser through the length of the hair with a wide tooth comb to make sure that every strand gets its share. You can apply a bit more to the ends if desired. There is no benefit in loading your hair with moisturizer as hair is only about 10-14% water and all you are trying to do is regain the moisture balance in your hair. You are more likely to ruin your style by leaving relaxed hair looking greasy or reverting natural hair altogether by applying too much moisturizer! When you use a moisturizer well, it should keep your hair from drying out without weighing the hair down or being sticky.
Oil free moisturizers are also good option. They contain silicones that help 'seal' the moisture into the hair but their first ingredient must also be water and hair should be washed every 3rd day to prevent build-up. Some good examples of natural oil that can be used to seal in moisture after a wash are coconut oil, avocado butter, mango butter or Shea butter. Remember that these are oils and will just lock in whatever moisture you already have in your hair. It is advisable to dampen the hair slightly before applying any hair oil to it.
For more black hair care articles please visit http://www.BlackHairInformation.com

Visit the website and chat to others in our free community to learn how to grow your hair long: http://www.blackhairinformation.com
Article Source: http://ezinearticles.com/?expert=Alma_Campbell





*I thought this was helpful. I'm not a expert, but take what you need out of it and leave the rest.
:grin:
 
Last edited:
Moisturizing hair is as important as deep conditioning to any black person who wishes to have long hair. As washing and deep conditioning the hair every day is quite impractical, a hair moisturizer is required to avoid dryness until the next wash.
Relaxed and natural black hair tends to be quite porous so loses moisture quickly. The key to long beautiful locks is to keep replacing the moisture lost. The easiest way to do this between washes is to use a good moisturizer.
First things first, let's deal with a common misconception about oil. Oil is not a moisturizer! Oil lubricates the hair and 'seals in' any moisture you already have in the hair. If your hair is dry and brittle and you apply oil to it then you are doing your hair more harm than good. The oil will coat the hair and prevent any further moisture from entering the hair which will lead to breakage.
The best moisturizers should always be water based i.e. the first ingredient should be water; water is in fact the best moisturizer! Good moisturizers should also contain humectants. These are ingredients which attract water from the atmosphere, glycerine being the most popular of these. Honey is also an excellent humectant but more commonly used in conditioners and not moisturizers.
Always avoid moisturizers that contain mineral oil or any other petroleum based product in the first few ingredients. Mineral oil does nothing but coat the hair leaving it shiny but dry.
You may find that the best conditioners are the ones that are marketed to 'wet type' styles (jheri curl or wave nouveau) as they contain mainly water and glycerine. S curl is particularly good.
How to use hair moisturizers is just as important as getting the right product. If you plan to blow dry or roller set your hair, after towel drying apply a dime sized amount of a water and glycerine based moisturizer before you apply the same amount of heat protectant and comb through hair to evenly distribute. After the blow dry or roller set your hair will be left soft and silky to the touch and will remain like this throughout the day. If you plan to flat iron it then only apply leave in conditioner and a silicone based heat protectant to the hair.
Moisturizers should then be applied daily or as needed. Only a dime sized amount is required for shoulder length hair. A touch more for longer hair. Always comb the moisturiser through the length of the hair with a wide tooth comb to make sure that every strand gets its share. You can apply a bit more to the ends if desired. There is no benefit in loading your hair with moisturizer as hair is only about 10-14% water and all you are trying to do is regain the moisture balance in your hair. You are more likely to ruin your style by leaving relaxed hair looking greasy or reverting natural hair altogether by applying too much moisturizer! When you use a moisturizer well, it should keep your hair from drying out without weighing the hair down or being sticky.
Oil free moisturizers are also good option. They contain silicones that help 'seal' the moisture into the hair but their first ingredient must also be water and hair should be washed every 3rd day to prevent build-up. Some good examples of natural oil that can be used to seal in moisture after a wash are coconut oil, avocado butter, mango butter or Shea butter. Remember that these are oils and will just lock in whatever moisture you already have in your hair. It is advisable to dampen the hair slightly before applying any hair oil to it.
For more black hair care articles please visit http://www.BlackHairInformation.com

Visit the website and chat to others in our free community to learn how to grow your hair long: http://www.blackhairinformation.com
Article Source: http://ezinearticles.com/?expert=Alma_Campbell



Thanks for this very helpful info.

To the bolded: I thought Shea butter moisturises? :look:

Was I wrong or does it have moisturising properties and can also be used as a sealer?
 
Thanks for this very helpful info.

To the bolded: I thought Shea butter moisturises? :look:

Was I wrong or does it have moisturising properties and can also be used as a sealer?


*I thought shea butter was a moisturizer to, but according to this it is indeed a oil.
*After reading I'm going to use it just to seal my ends.
 
*I thought shea butter was a moisturizer to, but according to this it is indeed a oil.
*After reading I'm going to use it just to seal my ends.

It's my understanding that a moisturizer must have water as an ingredient. Not sure if that's true or not, but I use it as a rule when moisturizing my hair.
 
So..... if I apply my leave-in to wet hair, and put Jane Carter Nourish and Shine (which contains no water) on afterwards, have I sealed the water/moisture in successfully?
 
Only a dime sized amount is required for shoulder length hair.
]

This drives me CRAZY! :wallbash: I need to see video footage of someone actually successfully applying a dime-sized amount of ANYTHING to their hair, especially natural hair! Otherwise I won't believe it until I see it being done successfully. :nono:
 
]

This drives me CRAZY! :wallbash: I need to see video footage of someone actually successfully applying a dime-sized amount of ANYTHING to their hair, especially natural hair! Otherwise I won't believe it until I see it being done successfully. :nono:

.... AND... then they say run it through ALL your hair and FOCUS on the ends.... I don't have "dimes" that big to do both! :wallbash:
 
I wear my hair flat-ironed. What products can I use in between washes and deep conditions to moisturize without causing it to revert?
 
It's my understanding that a moisturizer must have water as an ingredient. Not sure if that's true or not, but I use it as a rule when moisturizing my hair.

That's the rule. I use water as my moisturizer. But, if something doesn't have water, it's not a true moisturizer. It may condition or nourish or strengthen, which can feel like moisturizing.

I wouldn't use shea butter as my moisturizer. I have used it on wet hair and that makes it better because of the water. Dry hair it's just gross.

So..... if I apply my leave-in to wet hair, and put Jane Carter Nourish and Shine (which contains no water) on afterwards, have I sealed the water/moisture in successfully?

Sounds like it would be fine to me. Depends on your leave-in. If you already have good results with it, then just do what works. As long as you feel your hair is moisturized then it's all good.

]

This drives me CRAZY! :wallbash: I need to see video footage of someone actually successfully applying a dime-sized amount of ANYTHING to their hair, especially natural hair! Otherwise I won't believe it until I see it being done successfully. :nono:

.... AND... then they say run it through ALL your hair and FOCUS on the ends.... I don't have "dimes" that big to do both! :wallbash:

I do not understand this. My hair is mostly shoulder length and a dime size of any thing cannot possible cover each and every strand. That doesn't even make sense.

I understand people not wanting to over do it on the products but I need enough product for all my strands. If a dime size of lotion is not enough to cover one arm, then I know a dime size of coconut oil is not enough for my whole head of hair...and I don't like to leave anything ashy.

I wear my hair flat-ironed. What products can I use in between washes and deep conditions to moisturize without causing it to revert?

A lot of naturals use coconut oil in between washes on straight hair. Coconut oil can actually penetrate the hair strand and it strengthens it because it has an affinity for hair proteins, and it helps stop their loss. It definitely nourishes the hair. And, it provides some great bling.
 
Back
Top