Shampoo your hair and scalp with a moisturizing shampoo. Rinse and apply a conditioner, leaving it on for three minutes before rinsing with cool water. Towel your hair dry until it's slightly damp.
Part a section of your hair. Starting in the back of your head, separate a triangular shaped section of hair that you'll use for the first twist and secure the surrounding hair with a metal clip. The size of the section will determine the thickness and number of twists you want.
Apply the gel to the small section of hair. With clean fingers, scoop out a small amount of hair gel. Run just enough of the gel through the parted triangular section of hair so that it's thoroughly saturated from root to tip.
Twist the hair. Because of the shorter length of your hair, use a comb to create your twists. Place the teeth of a fine-tooth comb in the gelled section of hair, nearest to the tip. Twist the comb and the hair until the section forms a tight twist from the scalp to the ends. Continue to make parts of equal size and twist the entire head of hair.
Allow the style to dry. Use a hooded dryer or a hair dryer with a diffuser to completely dry the hair so that the gel is set. If you're allowing the gel to partially air dry, spritz the twists with hairspray so that they don't begin to unravel before they dry
coarse hair is thick hair
Different hair types are thin, thick, short, average, long, oily, kinky, curly, straight, coarse, puffy and dry.
This depends, of course, on the length and type of hair. Very short hair dries almost instantly with a towel while long, thick hair can take hours to dry naturally. Thin hair also dries more quickly than, say, very coarse, thick hair.
Different hair types are thin, thick, short, average, long, oily, kinky, curly, straight, coarse, puffy and dry.
That depends on how long/thick your hair is and how large your two strand twists are. I have very thick hair about 5 inches long. I usually wash, condish and detangle my hair prior to twisting. I divide my hair into 4 sections and make 10 twists per section. It takes me 45 minutes.
layered and thinning of thick hair to make it more manageable.
No. Giraffes are short hair animals.
You can get twists, but they would most likely look like Senegalese twists. The "kinky" part of kinky twists comes from either having natural hair or added kinky textured hair. They will not look like the traditional kinky twists.
I think the metal barrettes would be great in short thick hair. I would use those instead of bobby pins.
Manatees have a thick bluish gray hide and a sparse amount of hair across their body.
By letting it grow.
gell