When someone asks me for a Dyson Airwrap dupe for getting silky, straight hair, I point them to the wildly good YouTube reviews for Tymo’s straightening brush. “They are so easy to use, and once you get the hang of rolling them, they only take a few minutes to put in and you're free to go around and get clothes ready, put on make-up, get kids ready, etc.” THE REVIEWS: “These work great, and they’re very gentle on my hair and give me bouncy, wavy-style curls with volume,” writes one tester. Then I gently take them down one by one in the order I pinned them up, finger-comb them, and spritz with hairspray for hold. I repeat this around my entire head, keeping the wider rollers on the top sections of my hair for extra volume, and let cool for 15 to 20 minutes. Here’s how I do it: I take a one-inch section of dry hair, wrap the ends under the roller, then roll it up vertically toward the crown of my head and pin it in place with the included sectioning clips. The old-school hair standby is low-key it for getting major volume, because your hair heats up and cools around the roller, giving you a defined, long-lasting curl that isn’t easy to replicate with the Airwrap. My favorite way to get bouncy, Airwrap waves without an Airwrap? Hot rollers, bb. This may have actually outperformed a much more expensive blow-dryer tool I have with attachments-a certain popular brand-simply because none of the attachments on the other one get my hair as smooth as the brush attachments on this one do.” “It can grip onto a pretty large chunk of hair at a time while still being effective. THE REVIEWS: “This is so great for thick hair,” writes one reviewer. Or you can get a super-sleek look by running the paddle brush through your hair, section by section, following with a smoothing cream for some hold and shine. So if you want a Rachel Green-style blowout on your thick hair, start with the round-brush attachment at your roots and slowly pull it down through your hair, flipping in the ends slightly by angling the tool. This T3 hot brush includes a round-brush attachment and a paddle-brush attachment that are excellent at smoothing thick hair without tugging (unlike the Airwrap brushes, according to some testers), thanks to their mix of plastic and nylon bristles. Everyone always compliments me on how natural and healthy my hair looks.” “I apply hairspray after, and my curls last all day. THE REVIEWS: “I bought this because I didn’t want to break my wallet buying the Dyson product, and it created gorgeous, big, soft curls,” writes one tester. Plus, testers say it gets has a strong airflow that can fully dry and style your hair without the pre-drying the Airwrap requires. But unlike the Dyson Airwrap that holds onto your hair with just air (sometimes causing frizz and flyaways), the Revlon locks your hair down with a clamp, giving you more control over how your curls look. It comes with a blow-dryer brush attachment to help grab, hold, and detangle as you dry, along with a vented curling barrel attachment that uses air to style your hair, making it v similar to the Dyson curling mechanism. If the main reason you want the Dyson is because of its ability to ~simplify~ your routine with just one tool, you may want to try Revlon’s new blow-dryer-curling-iron hybrid.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |