Best 7 Styling Tricks Women with Fine, Flat Hair Need to Know
Best 7
Styling Tricks Women with Fine, Flat Hair Need to Know
Having fine, flat hair might seem easy to style. After all, fine hair requireslongthun. little blow-drying and you can effortlessly tie it in a low-slung bun or ponytail on your way out while still looking chic. But many people with this hair type will tell you that it can be difficult to hold curls or add natural-looking volume—and no one wants droopy, limp hair halfway through the day.
To learn how to add gorgeous volume that stays
put until happy hour, SELF talked to a few top hair stylists for their best
tips and favorite haircut styles for people with fine, flat hair.
Styling Tips & Tricks
1. Use a lightweight volumizing shampoo and
conditioner to create a foundation.
“The most important step in getting volume for
fine hair starts in the shower,” explains Brianna Colette, stylist at Nine Zero
One in Los Angeles. Make sure you're using a lightweight volumizing shampoo and
conditioner that also have some moisturizing ingredients. These types of
shampoos tend to be more drying and can cause your scalp to overproduce oils to
make up for it, explains celebrity hairstylist Mark Townsend. We suggest Dove
Nutritive Solutions Oxygen moisture shampoo, $5, and conditioner, $5.
2. Never apply conditioner to your scalp.
“Any time you wet your hair you should use
conditioner,” Townsend says. “But only from mid-length to the ends.” Since
you’re opening up your cuticle, your hair needs the nourishment. But glopping
it on the roots will just make you look greasy and limp within a few hours.
3. But you can scrunch your hair in the shower
with conditioner.
Jen Atkin, celebrity hairstylist and founder of
Ouai, says scrunching wet hair in the shower with conditioner provides a great
foundation for air-drying. She recommends the Ouai Repair conditioner, $28,
since it adds lots of moisture for frizz-free air-drying.
4. Use a clarifying shampoo to get rid of
buildup.
Product buildup leads to weight in your hair,
which makes everything more droopy. “Using a once-a-week clarifying shampoo
will rid your hair of impurities and product buildup without stripping your
color,” Colette says. We recommend the Ouai Clean shampoo, $28, which is
formulated with keratin to smooth and repair damage.
5. Get over your fear of mousse.
Unlike the mousse our mothers used that dried out
hair and froze it in all its permed glory, mousse formulas today are more
elegant and hydrating. “Apply a volumizing whip or mousse when hair is wet,”
Colette recommends. “Comb a small, palm-sized dollop of product through hair
from root to ends. Be careful not to apply too much as this will only weigh
your hair down.” We recommend the Oribe Grandiose Hair Plumping mousse, $39,
which is great for a blowout.
5. Blow-dry to activate volumizing products.
You may be tempted to skip the blow dryer,
especially if your fine hair dries straight and smooth. But if you skip blow
drying, your volumizing work will all be for naught. “[With] almost all
volumizers you need to use a blow dryer with heat to activate them,” Townsend
says. He uses Dove Oxygen Moisture Root Lift spray, $10, before both
blow-drying and air-drying the hair of clients like Mary-Kate Olsen, who
doesn’t like a perfectly polished, blown-out look.
6. Skip the round brush until the very end.
“Flip your head upside-down and start by rough
drying,” Colette explains. In other words, use nothing but your hands. “This
will lift the roots and rough up the cuticle, maximizing volume. When hair is
60 to 70 percent dry, flip back over and start blow-drying using a ceramic
brush to smooth ends and add softness to the style.” But be careful not to pull
too hard—that’ll just flatten everything out.
7. Set hair with Velcro rollers to add extra
lift.
Colette suggests that after blow-drying, you
section off pieces of hair at the crown, roll them up into Velcro curlers, and
use the cool setting on your dryer to set the style. Finish with a texturizing
spray like Oribe Texturizing spray, $22, or Ouai’s Wave spray, $26, spraying at
the root in sections. “That way, when the style starts to fall throughout the
day all you need to do is flip your head over, massage your scalp, and fluff
your hair up,” Colette adds.
Keyword = longthun


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