Why does Asian hair tend to crumble and frizz easily?
This is a seeming contradiction,
But in Asia.Happens every dayCondition.
A lot of people have said that to me.
"My hair is thin and crumbly, but it's gross."
"If you blow it, it blows up. If you don't, it's all over your scalp."
"Do I have bad hair?"
I'll be the first to say a fair word for you--
It's not that your hair sucks, it's that you've been misunderstood.
Why do "collapse" and "hair" exist at the same time?
This is the most common place where Asian hair gets confused.
A lot of people think that 👇
- Collapse = Oil
- Gross = Dry
In reality, however, Asians are often 👇
👉 No support at the root, no structure on the surface.
So the result will be:
- Stick it near the scalp.
- The center section and the tail end are warping and blowing up.
It's not a conflict.
This isStructural Imbalance。
The key to the structure of Asian hair is actually very clear.
From a designer's point of view, Asian hair has several distinctive characteristics 👇.
- Straight and rounded hairs
- Concentrated weight, easy to fall down
- Not bad in elasticity, but weak in 'sense of direction'
Just a quick word:
Asian hair doesn't lack volume, it lacks the ability to hold its shape.
So as long as the cut, weight configuration, and finishing are not the same, the
Then both "collapse" and "hair" will appear at the same time.
Layers, weight and support have always been misunderstood.
When many people collapse, their first thought is 👇.
"So, do I have to cut a lot of layers?"
What are the results?
👉 More layers, less support
👉 Lighter surface, more visible frizz
The top of my head is still collapsing.
BecauseLayers ≠ support。
What Asian hair really needs is not "getting lighter,"
Rather, it is "weight in the right place.
I'm not holding up where I should be holding up.
Any more layers will just make it messier.
Common Mis-Organization (You Probably Do It Every Day)
I would like to name this paragraph directly.
Mistake 1: Blowing the surface wildly
If your scalp doesn't hold up, any longer you blow on the surface, you'll just blow up.
Mistake 2: Using too refreshing products
It's not that you can't use a product for fine hair, it's that you can't use one that's "all freshness, no structure".
Mistake No. 3: Refill at 10 cents
The result is just tighter hair with no frizz being tidied up.
These aren't you lazy.
It's the fact that no one taught you.The Real Logic of Asian Hair。
What do Asians really need?
If I were to answer 👇 in one sentence.
It's not fluffy, it's not flattering, it's controllable.
Specifically, 👇.
- We need support at the top of the head.
- The middle section should have a direction
- The end should be tucked in.
When the structure is right.
You'll find 👇.
You don't have to blow on it. It won't collapse.
You don't have to grease it up so much, and it's not so gross.
That's when you'll understand.
It turns out that the problem really isn't your handicap.
Overseas environments, how do you magnify this problem?
This problem is often more pronounced after moving overseas, and the reason for this is actually very realistic👇.
- Air drying → surface is easier to fry
- Different water quality → Hair feels coarser
- High winds, high temperatures → more unstable modeling
If your cut and structure is not suitable for Asian hair, then you should not use it.
Under such circumstances, the problem will only be magnified.
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