Woven or Braided for Hair Replacement System

October 28th, 2008 by admin

Woven or Braided for Hair Replacement System

Human or synthetic hair may be woven or braided into inborn hair. This is one of the many processes of hair replacements which is called hair weaving or hair integration. This hair replacement procedure entails weaving of the hair extension to small fragment of loose hair. The capacity to have any texture without having to chemically alter just to achieve a different quality is the main benefit of hair weaving.Just like any wig piece, the colors of hair for weaving can range from realistic colors like black, brown, red and blonde.“Virgin hair” is considered the highest quality of hair extension because of the fact that this kind of hair has never been processed. To attain a distinctive texture, this kind of hair can be chemically changed.Lace extension is the most current hair replacement development in hair weaving. These are made out of nylon mesh material. This creates a lighter and more breathable cap. To give hair a more natural flow, single strands of the lace extensions is knotted into the tiny openings of the cap form after being ventilated by hand. Special adhesives that are specifically made for hair weaves are used in weaving or attaching these lace extensions into the hairline. This glue may easily wash out either with the use of s special shampoo and conditioner or with a special glue remover. To make sure that there would be a proper fit, head measurements are first taken into account.

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How Hair Ages

October 27th, 2008 by admin

How Hair Ages

Think back to your childhood. Now focus on your pre-adolescent hair. It was probably more vibrant, shinier, fuller, and either lighter or brighter in color than your natural hair is now. There are a few reasons for this.During childhood, we have more hair in the growth stage than at any other time, giving us plenty of volume. At this time in your life, the sebaceous glands are working at the peak of their efficiency, which gives strands a high gloss. Hair pigment hasn’t started to darken, so your hair color is vibrant, and you probably aren’t yet messing around with hair-changing chemical processes, or using heat appliances - all of which can rough up strands’ cuticles or strip them away entirely, leaving hair dull and brittle.Teens and 20sDuring your young adult years, hair slowly begins changing from its childhood state: Strands may become coarser, growth may slow just a bit, color grows progressively darker, and the sebaceous activity for most of us goes on overdrive, pumping out oil at a furious rate. (This is the same sebaceous activity that makes your complexion pimply.) The teens and early 20s are a time for experimentation - and rightly so: how else are you going to find out what works for you and what doesn’t? Most of you have strong, slightly oily hair and can afford to rough it up a bit with the latest color or texture trends. Notice I said, “most of you.” In beauty, as in life, there are no absolutes, and if you happen to be born with fragile hair or sensitive hair, take it easy.Your 30s, 40s, and 50sBy the time you’ve reached your 30s, your hair has reached a plateau - the sebum is being produced at a more manageable pace and you have settled (I hope) into your looks and accepted your hair type. Your strands have reached their darkest shade the biggest surprise awaiting you is probably the appearance of gray.Blondes, redheads, and light brunettes are more likely to go gray, while deep brunettes have a better chance of going white.Of course, when you go gray depends on your genetic makeup - if your father and mother didn’t see gray until they were 95, then you probably can expect the same; if they both went gray in their 20s, you’ll probably be gray by the time you hit 35. The 30s and 40s, however, are a kind of “human average age” for this rite of passage. And while we’re on the subject of gray, keep in mind that gray hair does not mean your strands are no longer healthy. It simply means your cortex no longer contains melanin. Another piece of information: Gray hair often has a wirier texture than pigmented hair, so don’t be alarmed if these uncolored strands spring away from your head at strange angles. This is okay - even if you feel a like a Brillo pad.Your 60s and beyondBy now you may be sporting quite a head of gray or even white - hair. Sebum production has slowed considerably and your hair may grow drier and less in need of shampooing (and more in need of conditioning). Most humans experience thinning hair with age. By thinning, I don’t mean obvious balding - although if you are prone to that, now’s the time it will start happening. I simply mean that you will have less hair than you did in your youth. That’s because as we age, our hair spends less time in the anagen, or growth, stage, and more time in the catagen (transition) and the telogen (resting) stages. At this point, there should be no great hair surprises for you. Instead, with each decade expect a gradual decrease in sebum production and a gradual increase in graying and thinning.

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Hair Loss In Children: Why My Child?

October 27th, 2008 by admin

Hair Loss In Children: Why My Child?

Children often take hair loss better than adults, up until the age of ten. Less of their identity is tied into their appearance, and so the loss of hair is not as shocking for them. There are several reasons that a child may lose their hair which are not life threatening.Common Reasons for Childhood Hair LossA reason that many children begin losing their hair is Tinea Captis, also known as ringworm of the scalp. This is a fungal infection which affects both the hair follicles and individual strands. If not treated with medicine immediately, it can be contagious.Another reason for childhood hair loss is Alopecia Areata, which can cause baldspots on the head and other areas of body hair. It is theorized to occur when the immune system begins attacking follicles. With treatment started immediately, some body hair may be saved.Another cause of childhood hair loss is called Trichotillomania. It is a self-inflicted condition which is considered on the obsessive compulsive spectrum. In it, a child feels the need to obsessively pluck hair from their head.This condition is usually treated with some kind of behavioral therapy, often including relaxation techniques. Because the hair follicle is not usually damaged, hair should grow back when the plucking of it is ended.Other conditions which can cause hair to stop growing include individual trauma, and traction alopecia. In this disease, the hair is pulled at or rubbed constantly. The resulting trauma to the hair shaft can cause hair to stop growing. Severe hair styles may also cause this reaction.A body’s response to trauma can also lead to hair loss. After a traumatic event, some people’s bodies withdraw nutrients from the hair, causing it to fall out. Hair loss does not need to traumatize a child. A parent with the right attitude can help their child through hair loss with support.

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Woven or Braided for Hair Replacement System

October 26th, 2008 by admin

Woven or Braided for Hair Replacement System

Human or synthetic hair may be woven or braided into inborn hair. This is one of the many processes of hair replacements which is called hair weaving or hair integration. This hair replacement procedure entails weaving of the hair extension to small fragment of loose hair. The capacity to have any texture without having to chemically alter just to achieve a different quality is the main benefit of hair weaving.Just like any wig piece, the colors of hair for weaving can range from realistic colors like black, brown, red and blonde.“Virgin hair” is considered the highest quality of hair extension because of the fact that this kind of hair has never been processed. To attain a distinctive texture, this kind of hair can be chemically changed.Lace extension is the most current hair replacement development in hair weaving. These are made out of nylon mesh material. This creates a lighter and more breathable cap. To give hair a more natural flow, single strands of the lace extensions is knotted into the tiny openings of the cap form after being ventilated by hand. Special adhesives that are specifically made for hair weaves are used in weaving or attaching these lace extensions into the hairline. This glue may easily wash out either with the use of s special shampoo and conditioner or with a special glue remover. To make sure that there would be a proper fit, head measurements are first taken into account.

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Types of Permanent Waves

October 26th, 2008 by admin

Types of Permanent Waves

Body wavesIf you’ve got limp hair that would rather hang against your head than hold a style - even after you’ve tried all kinds of bodybuilding haircuts, experimented with styling products, and backcombed it repeatedly - a body wave might be for you. Think of a body wave as a kind of support measure that encourages hair to behave when you blow-dry it under, stays when you comb it back, or goes along with whatever you like doing to it. Because oversize rods are used for the service, you won’t get curls with a body wave; you may or may not get large, very loose waves.Root permFor people with flat, stick-to-the-head hair, a root perm can add lift without curl. Large rods are placed at the hair’s roots - and just the roots. This gives volume and height to perpetually lank locks. Think of it as a body wave for your hair’s roots.If hair doesn’t look curly after a perm service, it’s said that the hair ” didn’t take.” Culprits could include styling buildup on the hair, a medication you are taking, or imbalanced hormones, such as those caused by pregnancy. To prevent damage, don’t re-perm hair immediately- wait 1 to 3 months. And if you’re pregnant, wait until you’ve delivered the baby and are no longer nursing!Spiral wavesYou know those gorgeous, coiled ringlets you see on some naturally curly heads? That’s what a spiral perm aims to duplicate. The curls are created by perm rods that are rolled vertically instead of horizontally. There is a downside to spiral perms: The vertical rod placement doesn’t create the same firm, tight curls as the more traditional horizontal placement, which means your ringlets may be looser than you’d like.Reverse permIn a way, a reverse perm is a kind of curl-softening service. The treatment takes tightly or moderately curled locks and sets them on oversized rods. The result is softer, looser waves.Touch-up permIt’s not healthy to re-perm strands that have been previously treated. The best way to keep damage at bay is to simply perm the new, untreated growth. This treatment is known as a touch-up perm, a re-touch perm, or sometimes a root perm.Heat styling is downright dangerous on degraded, fragile permed hair. If you can’t live without your styling appliances, limit yourself to occasional heat styling and always protect strands with a leave-in conditioner before you begin.

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Temporary and Semi-Permanent Hair Color

October 26th, 2008 by admin

Temporary and Semi-Permanent Hair Color

Temporary hair colorWhen I was in high school, I played on my school’s volleyball and basketball teams. During my sophomore year, one of my teammates got the brilliant idea to paint patterns into the underlayers of our hair - nothing so overt that we’d be caught (there were strict rules against using makeup and hairstyles to distract players), but something subtle enough that it would take a few seconds for our opponents to figure out what the heck was going on with our hair. A few unguarded seconds were all we needed - so we thought - to get a ball safely over a net or through a hoop. When we got tired of using our school’s colors (red, white, and black), we’d try our opponents’ colors (purple and gold, green and black, burgundy and silver) or adopt a holiday theme (orange and black for Halloween, green for Saint Patrick’s Day).The color we used for these experiments was temporary - shades that stayed in our hair only until the next shampoo. We preferred the foam (also called mousse and spray-on formula), but temporary color is also available as a rinse. Of course, not everyone wants to wear the fanciful shades my teammates and I favored; fortunately, temporary hair color comes in many natural hues. One more thing to keep in mind is that temporary color contains no ingredient to alter hair’s structure and because of this, it cannot lighten hair. Instead, use temporary hair color to darken or slightly brighten strands.If you have damaged, chemically straightened, or permed hair, temporary and semi-permanent colors are the safest choices.Semi-permanent hair colorSemi-permanent color is terrific for hair-color newbies. It washes out in 6 to 12 shampoos, contains no potentially damaging peroxide or ammonia, and, once it’s gone, leaves your hair the same color as it was before being colored. This means you can experiment with shades until you find one you want to use consistently. Because of its gentle nature, however, semi­permanent color can’t change things very dramatically. It has a slightly translucent quality that makes it better suited to enhancing rather than altering your natural color. What semi­permanent hair color can do is take hair one or two levels darker, or maybe even a shade brighter. Gray hair, which is notoriously resistant to hair color, is rarely well camouflaged by semi­permanent shades. Furthermore, these shades’ lack of chemicals means they have no lightening power whatsoever.If you’re a brunette who dreams of being blonde, semi-permanent color is not for you.

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Reason for Hair Loss - Is Yours Permanent or Temporary?

October 26th, 2008 by admin

Reason for Hair Loss - Is Yours Permanent or Temporary?

Have you ever thought you saw why each time you wash your hair you notice that there are many strands of hair on your bathroom floor? One of the most typical phenomenon amongst individuals that are the age of 40 and above is hair loss.If you feel that you are about to become one of those individuals who are continually losing their hair, it would be a wise decision to understand some of the reasons for hair loss prior to starting to panic and try those hair loss treatments which might not be ideally suitable for you.Hair loss might be either permanent or temporary depending on what the underlying causes are for hair loss. There are numerous reasons for hair loss, it could be from a genetic trait which are more often a permanent effect, or it might be a medical condition. If the cause for hair loss is related medically such as medications or perhaps chemotherapy being undertaken by an individual or possible emotional problems and stress, hair loss such as this might be temporary in nature.PermanentThe genes of the person are typically what is behind the cause of permanent hair loss. There are certain individuals who are predisposed to hair loss. If you are from a family of men as well as women who typically lose their hair as they become older, genes could be the cause for hair loss in your case. Because the cause of this hair loss would typically end up being permanent baldness, it may be a wise decision to consult a hair doctor who might provide you with some advice on how to counter this problem.TemporaryTemporary hair loss can be the cause of stress. If you are disturbed emotionally, your hair might lose some of its luster and would look lifeless and dull. The majority of instances, three months after a particularly stressful event, a person would begin losing his or her hair as an after effect. Because this is a temporary hair loss condition, the hair could in reality grow again based on some specific period of time.An additional reason for hair loss would be giving birth. It is very likely for women in general to shed off some hair in a few months after they give birth. Having hair loss after giving birth is nothing to be concerned about. And in the majority of instances, women typically have unnatural hair growth during pregnancy that they would actually have more hair and they have had at any other time. Losing some of that excess hair is a normal event after childbirth and is not a reason for you to become concerned.

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What is PCR?

October 25th, 2008 by admin

What is PCR?

One of the issues that scientists commonly encounter when they are processing a DNA test is that they don’t have much sample to work with. In essence, scientists are given just a few strands of DNA to work with, which can prove challenging when trying to obtain a sample. The main problem here is that sometimes, more abundant DNA is required for testing purposes to produce accurate results. Chances are, a scientist is going to be looking for thousands, if not millions, of different chains of the DNA in question so that they can continuously run tests on to produce results. However, how can this be achieved where only a small sample is obtainable? By using a method called polymerase chain reaction (PCR), scientists can take a single copy of a piece of DNA and multiply it consistently until they have millions, if not more, copies of the DNA piece to work with. The name comes from the key component in the amplification of DNA. DNA polymerase is an enzyme that assists in the replication of DNA. They catalyze (speed up) the polymerization of deoxyribonucleotides alongside the DNA strand. These polymerases read the code and then use it as a template. By using it as a template, they are able to make another strand and then another strand, to create the required quantity of material for examination. DNA Testing – Development of the PCR techniqueThe PCR technique was developed in 1983 by Karry Mullis. Karry Mullis, an American biochemist, won the Nobel Prize for the creation of PCR in 1993, and it has since become a central technique in biochemistry and molecular biology. However, the story behind its invention is rather interesting. The inspiration for PCR came from road markings, which its creator noted when riding his Scooter. The concept of using a pair of primers as a bracket came to mind and he realized that it would allow for the sequence that was desired to be made, thus PCR as a technique was born.DNA Testing – Key application of PCROne particular field of science that relies heavily on PCR is DNA forensics. If hair was left at a crime scene that was not that of the victim, scientists would have little material to work with. If they want to run one of the many different types of DNA testing, they will naturally require more DNA to analyze. Therefore, by running a polymerase chain reaction, they can replicate more of the DNA for testing purposes. By doing this, they can ensure that they have enough to continuously run DNA tests, with a view to providing more accurate results.The creation of the polymerase chain reaction was a defining improvement to molecular biology and biochemistry. At one time, scientists were only able to use very little amounts of the desired DNA chain, yet now they are able to replicate the sequence they desire and continuously create more and more material for testing purposes, which is of particular relevance in forensic testing of genetic material or in determining whether an accused individual may in fact be guilty of the alleged crime.

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Synthetic vs. Human Hair in Hair Replacement System

October 24th, 2008 by admin

Synthetic vs. Human Hair in Hair Replacement System

Hair replacements are used to disguise patches of bald areas caused by excessive hair loss. Synthetic hairs and human hairs are used as hair replacement in procedures such as hair weaving and braiding.Just like human hair, synthetic hair may come in weaves or weft and in single strands that are used for braiding. Most hair stylists refrain from recommending the use of synthetic hair when weaving because human hair last longer. Synthetic hair also frizzes out wildly and tangles easily. However when maintained well and depending on the quality of synthetic hair, it can look as nearly as good if not even better than natural human hair. Other than the quality and the length, synthetic hair is also much cheaper to use than human hair. Sometimes, lower quality human hairs are frequently mixed with animal or synthetic hair to lower the price.The older version of synthetic hairs used for hair replacements do not allow styling with the use of styling appliances like straightening combs or curling irons because the general rule is not to use any kind of heat for synthetic hair. Nowadays, there are newer synthetic hair versions that can be styled with such appliances as long as a lower temperature is used. Or one may use steam from boiling water to set and shape synthetic hair into style.Particular styles of braids are best made with the use of synthetic hair. It is rather typical practice not to change the style of an already shaped synthetic hair.

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Common Baldness by Mary Brown

October 24th, 2008 by admin

Male pattern baldness or permanent pattern baldness refers to common baldness and is the type of hair loss that commonly afflicts men. This is usually an inherited trait, passed from father to son. Generally, the earlier a man starts losing his hair, the more extensive the resulting hair loss. In male-pattern baldness a man’s hair line begins receding before baldness appears at crown of the head. In both men as well as women, common baldness accounts for 90% of hair loss. Though the exact causes are uncertain, experts think heredity, hormonal changes, and age are contributing factors. Unlike hair loss as a result of medication, disease, or other non-hereditary causes, common baldness is permanent. In women female-pattern baldness causes thinning over then entire scalp. Hair represents more than just hair. It is a conspicuous physical characteristic. Hair has wide-ranging cultural associations, it often represents youth, fashion, and sexuality. It is unsurprising that hair loss can be psychologically devastating to many people when it happens to them.

The average person loses between 50 to 100 strands of hair daily. This typically has no effect on overall hair quantity because new hairs replace those that have been shed. However, as a person gets older, this changes as the natural re-growth process slows down and ceases completely. It is then that thinning and baldness become evident. It is always advisable to speak to your physician about sudden hair loss to rule out medical causes. Like the skin and nails, hair goes through rest and growth cycles. If the cycle is disturbed by illness or stress, hair loss can can result.

Certain types of hair loss may be treatable. To rule out any medical causes, your doctor may ask you specific questions concerning your diet, any medication you may be taking, and whether or not you have suffered a recent illness. He or she may also question you about the specifics of your hair care routine. For women, menstrual cycle, menopause or pregnancies may be considered. An examination will be necessary to attempt to determine the cause of your hair. To further ascertain the cause of your problem blood tests and biopsies of the scalp may also be required.

Depending on what type of hair loss you have suffered, specific treatments may be available. If your doctor believes your hair loss is being caused by a medicine you are taking, a different type of medication may be prescribed. Recognizing and treating illness and infections can also put a cease to the hair loss. Hair loss may be interrupted by correcting the body’s hormonal balance. Certain medications, such as Minoxidil, might be prescribed to help slow the development of common baldness. This medicine, applied to the scalp, is available over the counter. It has been successful for both women and men. Prescription-only Finasteride is available in pill form. It is used only for men. In order to see results, it may take up to to six months. If there is no available medication for your type of hair, there are alternatives. You might experiment with hair weaves, artificial hair replacement, different hairstyles, wigs, or hairpieces. The current offerings are very natural looking may effectively disguise your hair loss.

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