I have never had any success with perms myself, I gave up trying them years ago, for the very reasons you mention. However, my hair is very fine so I may not be the best person to judge the effects and benefits of a perm! I did some research on Google and it seems that as long as you take proper care of your permed hair you should not have too many problems.
I found a brilliant article on happynews. Com, which gives great advice on permed hair and how to care for it. I have put the link below.
Another site, hairstylecity. Com has a good series of questions and answers all about perms which cover most aspects of perms and the effects on your hair. It would be an idea to have a look at both these sites before you get a perm.
Strangely, I have found as I have got older, that my hair has become slightly curly on it's own, so I don't need to bother about perms any more!
Perming your hair only affects the hair shafts, not usually the hair follicles themselves. So while you can damage your hair from perming it too often, it’s hard to permanently damage your hair that way. You can get a perm every twelve weeks.
If you get it cut halfway in between, the weight of the hair that’s taken off will cause your perm to bounce back a bit. After twelve weeks, much of your perm will have relaxed and cutting won’t help to restore it. From professorshouse.Com -quote it isn't permanent!
But it will last long enough (two months at the least) to where you probably should make sure that you are intent on having a perm before you sign up for one. -endquote Perming solutions can dry out and damage your hair. This will leave your hair frizzy and full of split ends.
The split ends will bind together, making your hair tangle easier. You can fix this damage by using a spray-on, leave-in conditioner. Don’t use a cream conditioner as it will weigh your perm down.
I have never had any success with perms myself, I gave up trying them years ago, for the very reasons you mention. However, my hair is very fine so I may not be the best person to judge the effects and benefits of a perm! I did some research on Google and it seems that as long as you take proper care of your permed hair you should not have too many problems.
I found a brilliant article on happynews.com, which gives great advice on permed hair and how to care for it. I have put the link below. Another site, hairstylecity.com has a good series of questions and answers all about perms which cover most aspects of perms and the effects on your hair.
It would be an idea to have a look at both these sites before you get a perm. Strangely, I have found as I have got older, that my hair has become slightly curly on it's own, so I don't need to bother about perms any more!
Perming your hair only affects the hair shafts, not usually the hair follicles themselves. So while you can damage your hair from perming it too often, it’s hard to permanently damage your hair that way. You can get a perm every twelve weeks.
If you get it cut halfway in between, the weight of the hair that’s taken off will cause your perm to bounce back a bit. After twelve weeks, much of your perm will have relaxed and cutting won’t help to restore it. From professorshouse.com -quote it isn't permanent!
But it will last long enough (two months at the least) to where you probably should make sure that you are intent on having a perm before you sign up for one. -endquote Perming solutions can dry out and damage your hair. This will leave your hair frizzy and full of split ends.
The split ends will bind together, making your hair tangle easier. You can fix this damage by using a spray-on, leave-in conditioner. Don’t use a cream conditioner as it will weigh your perm down.
Has hair to die for. It's shiny, it's full, it has just the right amount of bounce, and worse yet, she makes it all look completely effortless. What's her secret when it comes to having great hair, other than good genetics?
"I don't color it -- never have," LaVerghetta says. "I blow dry it every day and use a straightener sometimes, and I shampoo and condition every day, which works best for my hair type." To protect her hair against the heat of the blow dryer, she uses hair product first.
Her secret to hair success: Less is more. Most of us aren't as kind to our tresses. From highlights to lowlights, chemical perms to chemical straightening, blow drying, braiding, and bleaching, how we treat our hair has a direct impact on how healthy -- or unhealthy -- it looks.
Causing split ends, lack of luster, or hair breakage, our styling habits play havoc on the one thing we're trying to capture -- beauty. Hair experts explain the anatomy of the hair on our head, offer insight into the damage too much styling can cause, and give advice on how to keep your locks looking luxurious.
I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.