How To Get Voluminous Hair

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Photos left emmagem.com right hairstylesarea.com

My hair has been feeling and looking flat lately. I think it’s because of the weather. Here’s what I do to combat flat hair and pump some volume into my hair.

If my hair is wet, I blow dry my hair upside down. This is usually the easiest and quickest way for me to get voluminous hair after I wash my hair. I just flip my hair upside and blow dry. I try to keep the airflow concentrated at the roots of my hair too.

If my hair is dry, I flip my hair upside down and spray some hairspray into my hair. Or I’ll just add some volumizing mousse. I found that mousse won’t weigh down your hair.

Find out more ways I add volume to my hair!

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Guest Blogger: Holly Miller

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About Holly Miller

The author of this post is Holly Miller, a writer for Coupon Croc, where you can grab a Very discount code to save on your favorite beauty supplies, skincare products and makeup brands.

A Short, Believe-or-Not List of Weird Beauty Tips That Actually Work


For those of us who want to look great without going to a salon on a daily basis, we often search diligently for easier-cheaper-faster ways to accomplish our goal. Some of the hints, tips and tricks we read are so outrageous that we cannot move quickly enough to distance ourselves from those techniques.

Believe it or not, though, some of those weird beauty tips actually work.

  • Brushed Hairspray

Many people know of the Hair-Spray-on-the-Brush trick for a good hairdo hold that still leaves your hair pretty soft. But how many times have you struggled with the hair stragglers that follow the bristles or the air current as you begin another stroke? Have you felt aggravated from it?

When you finish the hairspray stroke, flip the brush over and lightly coat it with the same hairspray, then gently stroke from your scalp to the end of the strands. The hair won’t lift from the static electricity, yet you won’t plaster your hair to your head. If your brush has too many openings for this to be effective, take an empty paper towel or toilet paper roll and coat the cardboard and try the same thing. If no rolled cardboard is available, try a small baggie and use it like a glove. Don’t over-coat the plastic, though. Remember: This is to calm the strays, not further hold your ‘do.

  • Rough Hands

Want to gently clean or remove light calluses from your hands and fingers? Take one tablespoon of honey and add one teaspoon of sugar and mix well. Rub over hands and fingers for 10 to 15 minutes and rinse well with a gentle soap in warm water.

The natural sweetness of the honey and its heavier consistency will inhibit the sugar from dissolving into the thick liquid, and the sugar granules subtly exfoliate the dead skin cells, leaving your hands smooth and soft.

If you have thicker calluses, it will, of course, take time for the build-up to get scrubbed away, but be patient. This trick really does work.

  • Eyelashes and Eyebrows

Gently blow dry your eyelashes before you curl them. The bit of heat gets those molecules moving faster and makes the eyelash easier to curl without risk of damage. Really. Don’t scald your eyes, but this truly helps.

As an extra boost, a hint of Vaseline on your lashes can help keep them in great condition. It doesn’t take much, so don’t overload.

Take an old toothbrush and use it to smooth rough or independent eyebrows into place. However, remember that they don’t have to worry about cavities, so resist the toothpaste habit.

  • Cold Contact

Keep your creams and lotions in the refrigerator. It can help extend their life, and the coolness can refresh your skin and give it a great glow.

The same goes for washing. Taking cold showers is rarely a treat, but a cool ending to your shower makes your skin look terrific. You don’t have to shock your system by turning off the hot water all at once. You can decrease the temperate a bit at a time, so by the time you are finished, a 30-second rinse in cool water is easily endured.  You save on utility bills, too, by using less hot water, and who doesn’t want to save money?

Thank you so much Holly for being a guest blogger. If you would like to be a guest blogger, contact me!

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Protect Your Hair From Pool Water

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Photo:  tripadvisor.com

I was talking to a friend from out-of-state and she said to me: you spend a lot of time in the pool, right? How do you protect your hair from the chlorine in the pools?

My answer?

  • I always rinse my hair with water before getting into the pool. I figure this way my hair will have absorbed water and not the pool water. I don’t know if this works or not, but it makes sense to me.
  • I always tie my hair up so my hair doesn’t touch the pool water.
  • I always rinse my hair afterward if I got my hair wet in the pool.

That’s all I do to protect my hair when I go to the pool. Do you have any hair protecting tips? Do share!

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Eyebrows: Threading vs Waxing

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After posting about Pamper Me Fabulous, I received a few emails asking about my experience with eyebrow threading and comparing it to waxing.

I’ve been getting my eyebrows waxed for nearly 10 years. I’ve gotten it done so many times, I’m pretty sure I’ve become immune to the pain that is associated with waxing. As for eyebrow threading, I’ve only gotten it done once.

I’ve heard people say threading hurts more than waxing or waxing hurts more than threading. Truthfully, I think it depends on each person and the type of pain you prefer. Both procedures don’t bother me.

Waxing

Waxing feels like ripping a band-aid off in one quick motion. That is the best description I can provide. Some pulls hurt more than others.

Pros:

  • removes a lot of hair at once
  • quick procedure

Cons:

  • wax can be too hot for your comfort
  • One of the things I don’t like about waxing is when the wax doesn’t remove all the unwanted hair in one pull and the aesthetician has to re-wax the area or tweeze the strays. I admit that hurts.
  • it is easy to remove too much hair.
  • wax can remove skin

Threading

To me, threading feels like tweezing. I could feel each of the hairs being pulled out. I also felt a slight rug burn coming from the thread. It is sort of like taking a piece of thread and rubbing it back and forth quickly across your skin. It’s that warm, burning feeling.

Pros:

  • natural, softer looking brows

Cons:

  • depending on how much hair needs to be removed, it can take awhile
  • you can feel each hair being removed

Like I said, threading and waxing pain depends on each person. Do you prefer feeling the pain of pulling one hair out at time one right after the other? Or do you prefer getting the hairs pulled out all at once?

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How To Do An Easy, Wispy, Updo Hairstyle

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This is my go-to hairstyle for summer. It’s so easy and quick to create. It even works on my thick, currently shoulder length, Asian hair. If you watch this video by Total Beauty, you’ll notice that he ties/knots the bottom half of her hair (about 1:23 mark). Since my hair is currently too short to knot, I just twist the bottom half into a bun and secure it with bobby pins. It works just the same.

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