I use the wave and it makes your skin really soft but if it makes your skin dry try a good face lotion
Its a vibrating thing you put these cleansing pads with water activated soap in them. You use it to wash your face.
What you should do is be sure that you wash your face more often. I usually wash my face in the morning and before I go to bed. The best thing to do is to keep your hands away from your face, too. Touching your face with dirty hands is a good way to spread bacteria and dirt, which clogs up pores and creates those big mounds on your face, pimples. What you should do when washing your face is these steps below... If you have a Wave Facial Cleanser, use that, but add a little drop of face soap to the attached pad on it. The pad doesn't have enough soap to wash your face. 1. Wet Wave pad with WARM not hot water. 2. Turn on vibrating cleanser. 3. Scrub for a good 2 minutes. 4. Rinse with cool water. For best results, do not use hot water, or too much soap. Do not use too little soap either. ALWAYS keep your hands away from your face. But, by any chance, if you do have to touch your face, be sure you do it with clean hands. WASH you hands often not only to kill germs, nut to kill bacteria on your hands that can spread to your face and cause zits... That is the best I can tell you. Just wash your face, and keep your hands away from it... Strawberrylover98
1st get a low haircut. Then get a good wave product and keep brushing. Then apply a wave cap over night.
Wavelength multiplied by the Frequency of the wave .
Their product is the wave's speed.
The product of the wave's frequency and the wave's wave length is equal to the speed of propagation of the wave.
Coastal erosion is when land is starting to wash away. This is when water wave began to wash away the beaches.
yes because the wave wash the plankton on the shore
yes because the wave wash the plankton on the shore
1 week
The product of (wavelength x frequency) is the wave's speed.
The speed of a wave is equal to the product of its frequency and wavelength.