Always test the heat level of a new appliance before you ever apply it to the hair. A piece of moistened tissue paper should be inserted in the appliance and held for a few seconds without any scorching. If the paper gets discolored, the iron is too hot.
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Yes, of course. The hair on your face is hair just like on any other part of your body - including your head. It can be colored by the same products you use to change your haircolor. There are some differences, obviously. The one most readily apparent to everyone is texture.
Facial hair tends to be much coarser than the hair on the head, and as a result can be more resistant to haircolor. The facial hair can also be less dense than the hair of the scalp and color application must therefore be done much more carefully to minimize the staining of the skin underneath.
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To get volume,blow-dry your hair with a round boar’s-hair-bristle brush. The round brush gives hair tons of body, and the soft bristles make hair extra shiny.
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Nothing’s more natural in summer than pink, flushed, “just-back-from-a-run” skin. To get this look, apply bronzer on all the bits the sun would naturally hit: forehead, cheeks and nose. Then apply a pink blush on the apples of your cheeks.
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One of the biggest beauty myths is that chocolate (and fried foods) can cause acne. Extensive research shows this is simply not true. A poor diet and/or stress however, can exacerbate acne. So if you already have a pimple problem, try to maintain a healthy diet.
Hormones, overactive oil glands, heredity and dead skin cells that lodge in your skin pores are what causes acne, according to the Acne Resource Center in Tampa Florida.
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When covering gray hair that makes up less than 10% of your total number of hairs , it is generally recommended that you use a color that is 2-3 shades lighter than your natural color. However, this is referring to deposit-only haircolor and will not change the color of your already pigmented hair. The objective is to simply darken or “mute/mask” the grays so that they appear more like natural highlights than grays.
The reason for using a hair color that is lighter than your hair’s natural color is because using a shade that’s the same as your natural color you will likely create a “flat/dull” color result. With deposit-only color the color applied is added to the pigment that is already present, this means that choosing a shade that matches your current color will result in even darker hair color results. We use lighter shades to create a more natural looking result from the grey hairs. This also creates more body & shine for your hair!
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Gray hair actually grows no faster or slower than pigmented hair does. However, when the hair turns gray it can often undergo more changes than merely color, many times changing in texture, porosity and wave pattern. Actually, “turning gray” is a misnomer, since the hair actually goes gray when the melanocytes in the hair follicle stop producing melanin (which gives the hair its color) and the newly growing hair fiber emerges without pigmentation.
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Eyebrows
Lip
Cheek or Chin
Neck
Underarm
Arms
Back
Bikini
Legs
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According to the research I’ve done on the effects of radiation therapy, medical professionals say that radiation therapy will only affect the areas that are exposed to the radiation.
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