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Who invented glossine?

Glossine paper was invented by Sir William Congreve, an English military officer and inventor, in the early 19th century. Glossine paper is a type of thin, smooth, and glossy paper that is commonly used for packaging and wrapping delicate items.


What product did Madame C J Walker first sell?

She first sold her "Wonderful Hair Grower" and then her Glossine, Tetter Salve, and Vegetable Shampoo. Her original products are still being manufactured.


Did madam cj walker invent the perm?

Answer #3: No Madam C. J. Walker did not invent the perm or the straightening comb. This is a myth. Answer #1: yes Mrs. madam cj walker did invent the perm she invented lots more stuff to like the straiting comb and flat iron. Answer #2: No Madam C. J. Walker did not invent the perm. Infact, she did not like the use of chemical hair straighteners. Her main products were her vegetable shampoo, her "wonderful hair grower" (which contained sulphur and was used to heal dandruff and scalp disease) and glossine (which softened the hair and made it easier to comb). Other inventors developed chemical hair straighteners as early as the 1850s long before Madam Walker was born. An African American man named Garrett Morgan was one of the many people who experimented with chemical hair straighteners during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.


What is the name of the Madam CJ Walker's hair product?

Madam Walker's five original products were Vegetable Shampoo, Wonderful Hair Grower, Temple Salve, Tetter Salve and Glossine.Source: On Her Own Ground: The Life and Times of Madam C. J. Walker and www.madamcjwalker.comMadam C. J. Walker's original five products were "Madam Walker's Wonderful Hair Grower," "Tetter Salve," "Vegetable Shampoo," "Glossine" and "Temple Salve." She created a system of "beauty culture" to promote clean and healthy hair and scalps during the early 20th century at a time when most Americans lived in homes without indoor plumbing, electricity and central heating. Thousands of African American women learned to become "scalp specialists" by taking mail order courses and attending Walker Beauty Schools in New York, Indianapolis, Pittsburgh, Dallas, Kansas City, Washington, D.C. and Chicago.Source:www.madamcjwalker.com and On Her Own Ground: The Life and Times of Madam C. J. Walker (Scribner 2001) by A'Lelia Bundles.