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drunksunflower
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Default May 18, 2007 at 04:14 AM
  #1
New Remington Wet to Dry straighteners = win.

Also easily used on already dry hair :>

I was VERY lucky that my friend (we do a bit of City Mission work together from time to time, not a close friend, but a very cool chick) has started working for the company - actually, thanks to you, cos you instigated me looking into them and posting a thread on [site] to find out reccs ...

Anyway, I tried them as soon as I got them tonight ... my girl gave them to me at cost and a bottle of wine :> and WOW.

She says she has friends who have GHDs to try them and be honest (she doesn't care, cos if they have them they have them) and the rating is just as good.

Anyway ... I hope you have as much success as I do Attn:  alexandra_k Just possibly remember to get wide plates cos your hair is thick.

xx
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Default May 18, 2007 at 09:15 AM
  #2
thanks. i'll take a look over the weekend.

my hair isn't thick... it is just that there is a lot of it... i guess i'll think about which size plates to get too...
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Default May 18, 2007 at 11:54 AM
  #3
Ahhhhh a LOT of hair ... I have *quite* a bit of fine hair, but probably not as much as you do.

I just wanted to tell you that I like what I've got - and I have used friends' GHDs plenty of times, and this is a lot better than $350 for what I perceive to be as the same result Attn:  alexandra_k
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Raynaadi
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Default May 18, 2007 at 11:58 AM
  #4
I've got one of those. It worked really great when I first got it, would straigthten wet hair like a charm. A lot of steam came off and it sounded like my hair was frying but it wasn't. But now after having it a few months, it doesn't work as well on wet hair. When I read the reviews on it, thats what I had found too, but I just hoped mine would last longer. It also seems to pull at my ends a little, and if you're not careful, the steam can burn you. But they do work GREAT!

Hope its ok that I posted in a thread saying Attn: Alexandra.....cuz I'm not her......LOL!!!!!

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Juliana
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Default May 18, 2007 at 01:46 PM
  #5
I have one of the Remington straighteners too. I love it. I don't use it very often, but when I do, it does a wonderful job. I have a lot of hair, so I don't have the patience to blow-dry and THEN straighten, so I love being able to straighten and dry at the same time. My stylist told me to just make sure I spray my wet hair with a heat protecting styling mist before straightening. I just use a cheap one by Thermasilk.

Isn't it odd how the things that are bad for our hair often are the same things that make our hair look fabulous? Attn:  alexandra_k

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Default May 18, 2007 at 02:13 PM
  #6
Oh I use the Thermasilk stuff too, gooooood stuff!

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drunksunflower
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Default May 18, 2007 at 08:08 PM
  #7
Ahh. Rayna. If you don't clean the product off your straighteners, then that is why they don't work so well.

Insider tip Attn:  alexandra_k
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Default May 18, 2007 at 08:11 PM
  #8
And they're supposed to steam :P
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Default May 18, 2007 at 09:34 PM
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so i'm guessing that pinksoil burned her face with the steam.

are they really meant to steam?

i might get into town today but i might not cause it might rain...
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Default May 19, 2007 at 12:57 AM
  #10
They steam when the hair is wet, because the straigtener is pulling the moisture out of the hair.

I'll try cleaning the plates, they don't like anything is on them, but I'll try it anyway. Thanks for the tip!

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Default May 19, 2007 at 03:32 AM
  #11
hmm...

well...

they didn't have any wet to dry remington straightners so i went with one that straightens dry hair.

thats ok 'cause steam sounds scary...

looks like the same thing, just needs to be used on dry hair. S6001
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Default May 19, 2007 at 05:13 AM
  #12
so...
hurry up and dry already...
c'mon hair, you can do it!

sigh.

i guess this means i'm gonna have to buy a blow dryer as well. aaargh. damn myers for not having the wet to dry variety. damn 'em i say.

ps...

with respect to 'salon quality' styling products there are a couple different dimensions to that. firstly, it can be about getting the finished result. so... you need something that is capable of getting the right heat setting and sticking to it consistently etc etc. the other dimension, however, is durability. 'salon quality' stuff needs to be durable because it is fairly much constantly in use. hair straighteners whose surface starts to bubble / flake after 3 months of constant use are a pain in the but for a salon, for example, even though an average person could probably get something like 5 years worth of use out of the same product.

i've heard that with the remington hair straighteners (in fact with all the dept. store ones) they simply aren't as durable. you can get ones that give you the right finished result, but after some use the surface on the plates starts to bubble / crack etc.

so... my straightener came with a 2 year warrantee and their are authorised repair people who aren't too hard to get to. i'm planning on using the darned thing ALL THE FRIGGING TIME so if it lasts me 2 years thats like, sixty bucks (yay meyers sale) for two years which is like however many dollars a day so thats all cool :-)
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Default May 19, 2007 at 06:31 AM
  #13
again i say it is what you do with it - using product and not cleaning it means bubble and flake..
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Default May 19, 2007 at 06:47 AM
  #14
how are you supposed to clean it? mine says wipe with damp cloth.
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Default May 19, 2007 at 09:30 AM
  #15
</font><blockquote><div id="quote"><font class="small">Quote:</font>
alexandra_k said:
so i'm guessing that pinksoil burned her face with the steam.

are they really meant to steam?

i might get into town today but i might not cause it might rain...

</div></font></blockquote><font class="post">

No, somehow I touched the side of the plate to my face, lol.
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Default May 19, 2007 at 10:51 AM
  #16
I have a Chi straightener. They're amazing. I now straighten my thick- shoulder length hair in about 10 mins. Mine steams when my hair isn't wet. The wet to dry straighteners damage really bad. I don't have patience either, but after I got my hair straightener it doesnt take long at all.

After showering I put Garnier Fruitice Long and Strong Leave in Conditioner in my hair. I then blowdry (if rushing) Then I layer my hair. Bottom to top. Before straightening each layer I put BEDHEAD Headrush onto it then BEADHEAD After-Party. My hair looks amazing then! =]

http://www.folica.com/CHI_Ceramic_Fla_d2457.html

I love this straightener!!! Attn:  alexandra_k

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Default May 19, 2007 at 12:51 PM
  #17
Alexandra how'd it go?? Did it straighten?

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Default May 19, 2007 at 01:03 PM
  #18
</font><blockquote><div id="quote"><font class="small">Quote:</font>
alexandra_k said:
how are you supposed to clean it? mine says wipe with damp cloth.

</div></font></blockquote><font class="post">

Yap.

The issue happens with the plates when product like the serums / oils some ppl use stick to it.
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Default May 19, 2007 at 08:56 PM
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</font><blockquote><div id="quote"><font class="small">Quote:</font>
littlemissjess said:
The wet to dry straighteners damage really bad.]


</div></font></blockquote><font class="post">

I actually researched this and if you keep your hair in good condition they are fine. No different to blowdrying Attn:  alexandra_k

They have an extra layer of tourmaline as protection ...

ALEX DO YOU HAVE STRAIGHT HAIR????
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Default May 19, 2007 at 09:18 PM
  #20
hey all. yeah, it straightened. i need to get a bit better with manouvering it (i want to curl the front bits around my face) whereas i kind of made them super-straight or possibly with a slight forwards / outwards flick, but thats all about practice methinks.

i'm not sure that wiping it with a damp cloth would remove serums / oils. using something to get the serums / oils off is likely to damage the surface, though. i did wonder a little whether some shampoo in water might be appropriate to wipe it with... but i dunno... don't want to damage the surface...

i think that heat is what damages your hair. it might damage your hair more if you use it on wet hair because you need to apply it more to dry your hair as well as to straighten it. if you use your blowdryer on a very cool setting then it really is hardly damaging at all. i had one of those brushes that you use to blowdry your hair straight. it was metal so the idea was that you wrap the hair around the brush and put the dryer right up against the hair on the brush so the dryer heats the metal to help pull your hair straight. fine if you are a hairdresser doing OTHER peoples hair, I suppose, but impossible to manouver otherwise methinks.

i used it on the lowest heat setting and put sections of my hair through it a few times (which was fine because some of the strokes were more uncoordinated than others lol).

i'm very happy with it, actually :-)
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