The best comb and brush for afro-textured hair is a wide tooth comb and a paddle brush. Afro hair is very tangle prone and fine tooths just dont work. Try to use leave in conditoner when detangler and general combing; it make the proces much easier. If it a weave that is Afro-texturized it the same procedure only if the hair is human. If its not then follow the directions on the package, ask a hair dresser, or someone who wears wigs often.
comb or pick it out
An Afro pick is a comb with loose teeth, usually used on very widely-styled hair.
Long enough to comb into a Afro
Comb you hair when it's wet or moist or damp and conditioned, and go in small sections from whichever direction you prefer.
The cast of Thick Comb - 2011 includes: Timaree as LLM Wayland Harris as Rainbow
Try to only manage you afro when it's moisturized and/or wet so that it's less difficult to comb or brush, especially the larger the afro has grown. After washing, conditioning, and doing the usual and necessary process towards keeping up with your hair, make sure you have a proper comb for the job and you can start from back to front, going by small sections until your whole head has been gone over.
Pigs. do have hairs on their bodies. but not like you have on your head. They are course and short...not very thick. So you would have to have a comb with spikes the length of a child's fingernail.
Make sure it's moist, wet, or damp and conditioned. It should make your afro softer and more manageable to being combed out properly with less tangle tying up your comb.
For those of you that already have curly hair keep you hair brushed when about 0.5 inches until you reach at least 1 inch. When at 1 inch comb your hair, comb your hair lightly not hard or else it will hurt. I recommend you to comb you hair at the top. When at 2 inches start to pick it with what we call and "afro pick" comb all around like a ball. Grow it out to at least 3-4 inches and pick it at the top try not to go so deep or you will hurt your scalp. For those of you that don't have curly hair crunch your hair up and pick it out every day and repeat, crunch, pick, crunch, pick. Until your hair is 4-6 inches and do whatever you like
a ninja with an afro
No, the afro comes from Afro/African-American.
Afro is the correct spelling.