The Best Detanglers

HonEB

New Member
I am looking hard for a product that will detangle my hair well. I am growing my hair natural and i need something to power through knots and tangles without leaving my hair dry or leave behind a messy build up.

Any ideas?
 
My FAVORITE conditioner is Finesse for dry/coarse hair. I shower, put a TON of this stuff in, and comb out with my wide-tooth comb while my hair is still wet and full of conditioner. Finesse never lets me down. It detangles my hair for sure. And, believe me, I've got some THICK hair! I love this stuff.
 
my hair's relaxed but i've fallen in love with the nexxus y conditioner b/c of the great job it does at detangling. biolage leave in tonic is also good.
 
Selah's Tangle Buster Routine
1) Section hair down center w/fingers or comb.
2) Gently and thoroughly saturate each section.
3) Before-hand, you will take a plastic pitcher that holds say 2 q. of water.
Pour in about 1/8 c.-1/4 c. of vinegar or so (cv or white). I just eyeball amt. Then pour in ALOT of conditioner. I use a cheapie or something I won't buy again for this stage. My hair is a few inches past my shoulders so I dump in about 1/2 c. or so.
Add about 3 tbsp. of light oil - Amla, coconut etc. I also put in about 2 tbsp of Elasta Recovery, but that's optional. Fill w/water, stir with hand.
4) Pour SLOWLY over each section, holding palm of other hand under hair to catch liquid against hair. Don't rub or manipulate hair now! Loosely pin up each section for about 3 min.
5) Take down. Gently finger comb as much as you can. Rinse about 3/4 of mixture out. Don't overrinse.
6) Shampoo only ONCE. Massage scalp moving hair as little as possible. Don't rub and manipulate hair length. Gently squeeze length, milking shampoo down it. I do this for about 60 - 90 seconds each side. Your hair will be clean, so don't worry about short time frame. Shampooing too long & multiple times causes tangles. Gently rinse each section.
7) Now apply your good conditioner liberally. Again, pin up hair. Let sit for about 3 min.
8) Take hair down. Gently finger comb. Only at this point should you comb hair. I use a seamless wide tooth comb from Sally's by Cricket ($1.99). Seamless ones are a must. Gently rinse, cool water.
9) Do another vinegar mixture, now just minus the conditioner. Again, use the coolest water you can stand to close those cuticles. Do NOT rinse out.
10) When towel drying, do not run. Gently pat/squeeze dry. That's it!

* Optional - adding essential oils on the front end mixture, or back end vinegar rinse. *

fyi - I do not use shampoos w/the chemicals to make all the suds. They strip and dry it out. I like alot of products, including: African Formula (shea shampoo / condit for ex.), Aubrey Organics (GPB deep condit, Blue Camomile Shampoo, Island Naturals), Nature's Gate (the Herbal s & c is very good & helps w/tangles).
There's more, but once I use them, I'm going to pare down to just 3, one being a mild shampoo/oil/E.O. mixture I'll make using Dr. Bronner's.
 
Rusk Invisible detangler is one I tried recently and it worked really well. I also recall one member saying that it helped her through her transition.
 
I dont know if BioSilk is considered a detangler, and I am relaxed but it works great at getting rid of tangles and knots and making my hair smooth.
 
I agree that Biosilk is a good detangler (most silicone based serums will be) I also agree on the Pantene R&N conditioner. That's a super-duper detangling conditioner. Here are 2 more: ION Finishing Detangler, Elucence Moisture Balance Conditioner
 
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