Hair Extensions For Thin Hair And Fine Hair - 2 Guys Chat

Bernard and Eddie discuss the different types of hair extensions for thin hair. Wefts, strands, hand tied wefts, beaded extensions, natural beaded row hair extensions and hand tied extensions.

Here is the Profitable Stylist opinion on extensions for fine hair from best to worst:

Keratin strands

Beaded strands

Beaded wefts

Heated tape in

Adhesive tape in

Natural beaded rows

Sew in extensions

Remember, this is just our opinion based on experience but the real key is tension vs non tension extensions.

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#2guyschat

What'S up profitable stylist we've got a great conversation to be had today we're going over different hair extension methods for thin hair and fine hair. Thank you for buying Bernard a coffee. Last week everybody he's happy today, yeah I had to drink water. Last week, yeah yeah, you had to drink water last week, so the different kinds of methods. What do we got? Tape-In extensions, sew-in extensions, bonded extensions, uh, weave extensions, wigs hair replacements. What other kind of systems am I missing? Beads string glue, nail gun, there's a lot of techniques out there yeah. So you know what we haven't talked about in a very long time when it comes to extensions, and I think this is the thing that everything we talk about today is going to kind of hinge on tension versus non-tension. That used to be big back in the day because way back when the only extension available to the whole world was weft. Now people called them weaves, they called them tracks, they called them all kind of things. Oh, it was a weft, but the thing you put on the head was a track and then you put the weft on the track or the cable or the weave or the braid or the cornrow braid. And when you did that braid on the head or that tying method, there was a lot of tying and needles and thread and knots, and it was a lot of tension. Then you put the weft on the track and sew it on again and add even more tension, and I did them so I remember we used to recommend people take some kind of headache medicine because you were gon na, have a headache and we undersold them like This is what the celebrities are doing. It'S the only way to do it, but if you want more hair, it's going to be painful, ready to do it and they would still do it. We made a lot of money doing it, but when the technique came out where we could do individual strands - oh my goodness, it was away from the head a little bit a little more free flowing. There was no pain on the head. Unless you did it wrong, then then the amount of hair, the angle, the tension, all this the stuff came into play, and then we had to be engineers to get the the hair extensions right. So then people would say why are some of my customers doing good? Some are not so. The topic is kind of hair extensions for thin hair and that's where the challenges came. It didn't matter what kind of extension you used if you didn't use the right techniques, the right angles, the right amount of hair to support some techniques. Don'T lend to the fact or to the possibility of caring about those things and that's what I'd like to go into today is talking about all the techniques and how they affect thin hair. Let me ask you a question. We talk a lot I was. I was in the salon last weekend and we were. It became a big joke. I was doing hair extensions for somebody who had fine, fine, hair and thin hair, and I kept saying you know: oh, your hair is very fluffy. Your hair is very light. Your hair and and they were just laughing because they're like oh soft language, okay, cool! Thank you. You know thank you for not uh, calling out the fact that I've got no hair kind of bald, but then one of the other stylists, because I kept saying well: okay, fine, then, if we're, if we're just saying it, you've got thin fine hair and she goes Well, isn't that the same thing thin, hair, fine, hair, like they're, actually two different things you can have thin hair and have it be thick, it doesn't have to be fine or, of course, right or definition of the word, and it doesn't matter what word you necessarily Use and that that plays into consultations I mean when somebody says I have blah blah blah. What you'll have to define that a little bit more, it's kind of like I don't want golden orange hair. You know what is gold to you. What is orange you? What is brass to you so right I mean we might use the wrong words a little bit here too, sometimes because we get caught up in language, but you're right, there's two things to think about how many hairs are on the head. That'S density, how close together? How far apart they are, if you have two hairs on your head, that's low density, but then you might have still those two hairs might be really big, thick, coarse hairs and that's technically fine, thin hair. But then some people would say texture is curl. You know what I'm saying straight: wavy curl, so right, it's marketing has has become, has evolved over time and and different words. The base words for things like okay, so so you say, texture equals curl and if I say to you, I've got normal hair that equals straight. It just has become synonymous with weird things. You know right so so the the thing that was funny to me is this new hand-tied hair extensions uh. Is it good for fine hair? Is it? Is it good for natural hair? What is natural hair? It I mean. Does it affect hair growth because some people will say extensions make my hair grow faster? Some people say extensions. Stop my hair from growing it really I mean is, is all of this true uh. I do have some opinions about this. Some people think hair extensions hanging on your hair, pull the hair out of your head faster, and I just don't believe, that's true, but the crazy thing, tiny bit of history of hand-tied hair extensions. They are not new, they are older than the wefts. I used 30 years ago when I, when I started talking to the manufacturer, about the beaded extensions that we started carrying not too long ago. I asked him about hand tied he's from Singapore originally from China he's in his 80's, so he's been making hair his whole life and he said why would you want hand tied extensions? I said: well, I'm not saying I want it. I just want to understand it better because everybody seems to want it. He said no hand-tied extensions are very old and were hand tied by the very poor community villages that couldn't afford the machines to make the better wefts, which were machine made, and I said why would you call it better? He said because hand tied first of all, they're very, very thin and fragile, and if you cut them to customize the size they fall apart and unravel the advancement was the machine made because handmade was so fine and thin people were putting two and three. On top of each other, to make it thick, I love that Americans can take anything old, make it new and and and then just market it, and then people just believe it. I believed it to a certain degree. I'M like what are these new natural beaded rows? It sounds so beautiful natural right, beaded and then then the one I don't know who copied off of who. But then you got the waterfall beaded rows. Waterfall beaded rows a pain, I don't know the rumor. Is they suing each other? One made a technique up. First, the other one copied, but you got to give it to both of them the freaking name. It'S I love waterfalls. I do, but you don't want that in the hair, it means terrible tension, terrible direction, it means pain and then natural beaded row. There is nothing natural. There is no such thing as natural there's, not much natural about our business right I mean you know we do there, isn't that there's a natural hair trend - and I mean it's mostly in the black community - a lot of girls are going back to their natural hair. You know, but in the white community there's very few very few people that want natural hair. They want highlights low lights. A different color cover my gray, it's very very few that the natural trend is uh is a big part of so I don't know. I think we should stick with the what's good for thin hair. You know something that I don't want to be. I don't want to be tagged for officially making this list, but I want you to kind of help make it with me. My business partner asked me if you were to say which extensions are the best or the worst. I don't know which end we should start on for thin hair. I thought, oh, that would be kind of neat to kind of list them out. I want I want to put a disclaimer up that we may along the way, go. Oh whoops. We want to fit this one in here, but just really quickly. I want to say, in my opinion, the worst extensions for thin hair. Should I say it first or you want to say no go ahead, you can say it first. I would say God and it's not because I hate natural beauty rows, but I would say: natural beaded rose not because they're natural, but basically sewn in or tied in wefts are the most damaging because you've got that tension on the head. The old-fashioned braided was worse. Now they're putting beads in every inch or two and putting string, and you see the hairs cocked to the side they're, putting the beads in where it's pulling hair off the way it wants to grow, causing tension and potentially pain before they sew the hair in and So we got that tension extension and then you got this big long, heavy weft on there, especially if it's done a little wrong, not enough hair to support and they stack four or five wefts on there. He added so much weight to that row. That'S got to be the worst for thin hair, in my opinion, yeah, if you actually, we, we went really deep into detail a while back talking about each individual system, the pros and cons of each individual system. You know and talking about hair extensions for thin hair and fine hair today. This is a very specific. That'S why you're saying your disclaimer the way you are because today's topic is a very specific type of hair, thin, hair and fine hair and the extensions so weft for you know before everybody starts blowing up comments and saying: hey you're saying you know: wefts suck. No we're not saying wefts suck we're just saying is it you know with all the other methods that are available out there right, yeah I'll agree with you on that one? I don't think that is the greatest option to go with I'll, but there are new. There are new wefts that go in with a bead that hangs a tiny bit away from the base of the scalp, so it gives that free flow of movement, so there are techniques out there, so those are more machine wefts that are like the flat beaded wefts Or beaded flat wefts, you know all of those techniques, yeah and listen. I want I want to make sure you don't give away the the best answer. Real quick. I know people can just fast forward on YouTube, but if they're watching this live, I want them to hear what our opinion about the best hair for best extensions for thin hair is towards the end, so don't give it away just yet I mean this is well We'Re starting from the bottom we're we're going up yeah, we started from the bottom, so I'm gon na throw tape ins in there as being bad for fine hair. It'S a thing where I agree: yeah, it's a stupid, I'm so sorry to cut you off. I'M super passionate about these two, then I'll. Let you talk for a while, but it drives me: freaking, crazy tape, ins who started this rumor that tape ins are the best extensions for thin hair. That'S what drives me crazy. I used to say it was the worst until beaded not beaded rows, but natural beaded rows till the tied in wefts till those came back in style, and then people started saying those are amazing for thin hair. You go to that natural beaded row forum or YouTube. Look at the comments. People are complaining, saying it's breaking my hair off. She won't answer me. She won't deal with me. She won't redo my hair. She won't refund me. I I'm like I love reading the comments it it's. It'S definitely a technique that can work for some people. I thought about it myself. I'Ve even tried it, but it's very hard to be non-damaging when you're tugging on the hair and tape ins are just too much hair and too small of a section to put on fine hair tape. Ins are fine, but you know what it is is hairdressers are looking for the fast easy way, not all, but too many are looking for the to the for the fast easy lazy route and tape in and natural beaded rows are not that fast. So I don't know why that's gained popularity. I think there was this big push to reusable hair yeah. There you go. That was you said it yeah. There was this big push? There was this big trend? You know. I say this a lot in my classes. All the time don't believe marketing bs everybody's gon na, though everybody's gon na go for it right, but marketing came out real strong, real heavy. They were throwing millions of dollars at it saying: oh, you get to buy the hair and then you get to use the hair and it's your hair, and you know oh whoopty freaking doo, because it's a bunch of crap you with the thing what you got to Be careful about okay, so, let's just say you want to use tape in extensions yeah, that's fine use them! There'S a look there. There is there's a product out there for everybody and a time and a place for everything and a time and a place for everybody right with tape in extensions specifically, you have to you, okay, so so the the the extension comes with a piece of adhesive over It you put that onto the hair now on thin, fine, thin and or fine hair. There isn't enough strands to support that width of adhesive. Now you got to go to tear it off. I actually just had this consultation on the phone with somebody. A couple of days ago, she's lost some hair. You know she's on medication, she's lost some hair she's thinking she wants to go with the tape ins. I'M saying listen to me: that's actually the worst idea, because your your body is still adjusting to the meds you're. Losing you're still you're in the shedding phase right now. Oh my goodness yeah and your cuticle is thinning out now. You'Re gon na you're gon na gon na put this adhesive over it and then you're gon na go tear that off you're gon na be peeling off the layer. You'Re doing it wrong. You shouldn't tear it off by the time you get through the fourth or fifth sandwich you're like I'm over this okay. Oh, you reminded me of something with tape: ins like if that's the the tape and you're putting the hair on there. If you put too much hair before you put the other piece of tape on the two pieces of tape, can't even touch each other. So if you put the right amount of hair to support the weight, the tape can't even touch each other, because there's so much hair in between there that they just flop open. That'S the challenge with tape ins you literally have to. I feel like it's best to do it this way. You literally have to put so few strands in there. So there's space between the hairs. That'S the challenge. With tape ins, you can't put enough hair, you can't choose to put enough hair, so you're gon na definitely have too little hair. Now, there's a couple of companies out there that do that, one that one tape in with the backer piece that doesn't have hair on it. Oh yeah, at least you're, not doubling up the weight of the hair. It'S still challenging to get enough hair to support the weight, but you're not you're, not uh, and then there's a that one company out there that does the heated tape ins where you're like what company is that? That'S us guys a little disclaimer. We do sell a tape in through SHE hair. That is a little different and I mean when you put the when you can put enough hair in there. You literally, can you can put the two together and they can flop apart for just a minute, because you come in there with that little flat iron, you heat it up and you push heat through there and it seals to all the hairs. And then it doesn't come apart, I mean, but you know what it is, then it's not a fast easy tape in, and so it was never super popular, but it really is the best tape in if you're gon na do a tape. In still, I would, in all fairness say, be careful if you're gon na be trying to do it on thin hair or on fine air yeah. I still wouldn't agree that it's good for thin hair. It'S just better than all the other tape ins out there, and not just because I sell it. I actually started selling it because I got to use it way back when hair shows were actually still a thing. So now, what about one up from there, micropigmentation and or transplants and surgeries? What about them I mean, does micropigmentation really thicken. It gives the illusion that that you have thickened up, but it does it's not physically, adding more hair. No, it's not so again, I'm not! This sounds like we're bashing everything, but we're not for no. No, no because because I've used a lot of tape, ins on medium to thicker hair, I did tons of wefts back in the day, but when natural beaded rows came out, I had been doing hair longer than the people that started doing natural beaded rows. So I looked at it a little differently and I'm like well, that's just a weft and that left when you separate the hairs, has those little short return hairs that usually cause tangling itching poking the person's head. I just didn't like that. So I said I said you know what this is fascinating. A bead wasn't around when the first weft was so then people re-invent the weft and they try to add a bead to it. I thought what a great idea: let's see, if we can do it better and that's where our beaded strands and our beaded wefts came into play. It was totally different revolutionary. I talked to a girl in New Jersey yesterday she took she watched all three of the training videos before she got the kit and she's like. Oh, my God. This is going to be huge. I said I know it really. Is it hasn't totally taken off yet I mean we're selling a lot of it. A lot of people are doing it, but it's not like as big as some of the biggest hair extension companies out there. It'S fast, it's easy. It'S reusable, it covers all the the things that hairdressers want as far as ease of use, but what I love most about it is, you can choose the amount of hair that comes through the bead and I'm talking about it because it is actually next on my List, okay, the beaded uh, the beaded wefts - would be the next best moving towards what's good for thin hair. But I really think a beaded strand is a little bit better than a beaded weft, because I get a little worried about so much hair hanging from these little anchor points. So we actually use a little bigger. It'S still a very small bead. We use a micro bead and a small bead for our strands in our wefts, and so the weft has a little bit bigger bead. Do you remember the size? Is it uh one and a half millimeter and two millimeter? It'S a two millimeter bead, very, very small bead, but I encourage you to pull as much hair as you can through that bead because that's the support you need and that's where I think most people make a mistake. It'S kind of like people who say uh she's got a whole lot of hair, so I don't need much extensions yeah, it's like the opposite. So with this it's the same thing. It'S like she's got thin hair. So you don't need much extensions, but you do need much or a lot of hair coming through the bead. You need as much hair as you can, because if a girl has thin hair, there's some things you're, not thinking about, maybe you are, but most people aren't thinking about, and I didn't for a long time if a girl has thin hair or a guy they're going Through the shedding process faster also, so you need as much hair as you possibly can to support the weight in that bead because they're first don't have enough hairs per square inch density and then they're going to lose some of those hairs faster than the average person. So then, you also might need to talk about them about their hair care, routine. That hair care routine now has to be more gentle because they have more weight on the hair and they need to come in and get the extensions taken out and put back in more often because they're going to be shedding some hair that was holding the extension. So that's going to be what I would put next in order. We went from tape ins to beaded weft to beaded strands that next one's going to be our number one. One of the things you have to keep in mind what's happening with thin hair yeah when, when you've got that square inch, when you've got that area where the thin hair has to fill in, it's falling, it's it's following always natural fall, and I think one of The biggest mistakes with extensions that is made, I mean yes for thin hair for fine hair, but even for medium hair density, texture, uh, thick curly straight I it doesn't matter. I think one of the biggest mistakes that is made is that we don't follow the natural fall and we start borrowing hair from the sections from the sides. Next to it right like when you're pulling in the pattern there, each one of those sections each one of those squares, is representing where the a bond should live or where a weft should live or where a strand should live a tape in a sew in um. A beaded, you know all of the different methods that are out there when you start pulling in from the sides you're creating that tension points, the center is twice and some people pull from too low and then they start pulling from too low. That'S that waterfall yeah yeah waterfall beautiful word, you just don't want it in your hair. So, that's that that's the whole thing what what you, what we always have to keep in mind, depending no matter what method that we're doing the all of these things that we've been talking up until right now are all the reusable methods. That'S true. I want to reiterate: reusable doesn't mean forever; no, it doesn't mean forever and it don't mean forever. It doesn't mean either one I hate you so much it does not. You have to replace them. I can't say how many times I've seen some ratted janky. Looking. You know the the the track where the hair sewn into is all beat up. The the adhesive themselves is all falling apart and melting apart. You, you, reusable hair in my opinion, should be replaced by about the third visit uh. What do you think right? It depends on the quality of the hair, how hard they are are on it, their hair care routine, how their hair growth goes, how fast or slow their hair grows right. There'S a lot of things that come into play now. Listen hair is hair. That'S what some people think hair is not hair, but it's not hair coming off when when it comes off the donor, it's always a different quality, sometimes it's better than others, and so then, if you get the light, hair most donated hair is dark in the world. So when you get light hair, it's going to already have been processed a little more than average, so it's not going to last as long as most dark hair. So a lot of little nuances to think about and we're going to move into. What I think is the number one best, hair and I'll give you my opinion. Why, for thin, hair is a keratin bond. Now, of course, I love SHE hair keratin bonds, but there's a lot of them out there I mean great lengths is a good keratin bond. I know they've got, I don't know dream catchers. What'S some other names there's a couple of them with the dream word in it, there was his and hers back in the day. Yeah there was, there was hot hot heads: do they have a keratin hair dreams? That'S what they're called hair dreams. I always mix the two up and a dream catchers. I believe so. There'S there's a lot of different names, even uh, on right, hair visions, uh ihi, international hair goods, a lot of those companies dabble in new concepts, new image. A lot of these companies dabble in a keratin bond also um easy hair, there's an easy hair, easy hair pro john renau. I think it's his son, who supports uh it that has that company over in California. A lot of these companies have a keratin bond. I and you I know, love the SHE hair bond. We I came out of using great lengths for about seven years before SHE hair came to this country and, oh, my God, just the the color selection. So many things are good, it's good and then better about them than great lengths, but without without really going into one particular brand, a keratin bond. It'S it's the Cadillac of extensions. It really is, oh, you can't reuse the hair. I know that's true, but some people money doesn't matter. They want the best for a reason, you're going to get the best hair, the best performance, the most comfortable. It'S going to stay on your head longer, the average head of keratin bonds. First of all, you can pick the amount of hair in depth and width to put in that keratin bond. You can take the character mind, you can split it in half and fourths. If you need to micro bonds, you can do a full bond, you can choose the amount of hair, that's being hung from that one little section and then, if there's an area of the head, just fine or thinner compared to another, you can monitor and you can Take those out sooner and replace them and leave these in. You don't have to take the whole thing out, because it's not all connected there's so much versatility with a with a keratin bond, so much customization and and people say, but you can't reuse it. I get that, but it is still the best it's I mean it it. Yes, it costs more money, but some people want that rolls royce of the car industry. I want the uh cyber truck by elon musk. When it comes out, you know, and - and I don't care what it costs - I'm gon na try to get it. I want that thing to be self-driving and take me wherever I want, so I can be texting. You well and then arrive or take a nap. You know I mean anyway, why do you love keratin bonds, the the here with when it comes to fine hair? Okay, so we talked about thin, hair and and and the density you know, and how much space it takes up now, the hair that exists: fine, hair. That means that cuticle, that cortex, it's doesn't that the strand of hair, the physical strand of hair itself, is not growing out in the full like. If, if there's this much space for it to grow out, it's only growing out in in half the amount or something right that is fine hair. For whatever reason the follicle has weakened, where it's not producing the full amount of keratin. For for the hair strand to push out okay, so now, when you've got that fine hair, it cannot support a lot of weight in natural fall, especially in free fall. The problem with extensions is not in the beginning when you first put it in the problem with extensions is fast forward. Four weeks, six weeks, eight weeks later, when now you're a half an inch to an inch off the head you're in free fall there. That'S where gravity starts taking over now, so the more problems you can solve up front, the better off you're going to be in the long run. Why I love keratin bonds, individual strand by strand extensions, is because, with for the same reasons, what you're talking about you can cut the bonds and make them smaller. You can even split the bonds in half and make a micro. You can fully customize the size to to exactly match the section of hair that you're applying it to now, whether you're doing that as a roll or whether you're doing it as a flat wrap method. Oh that's what I was going to bring up. You can do round bonds flat right, that's you're, going to mimic the exact! So if you take this much section you're going to apply that extension to match that much section right now, you're going to be in free fall a natural fall. What I like about that and I'm going to do it a little bit bigger if you think about a keratin extension, you take a section, that's this wide and you put a keratin bond in right there and you heat it up and it spreads a little. You can decide which I don't I don't like to roll it, just roll it real, quick, that's the way. Most people do keratin bonds and still teach it, but you took that section like that and you pulled it into a round bond and then you expect that hair to well it just is flare back out because of its fullness. So you've got this little bit of an unnatural look. So now I'm knit picking even keratin bonds. I mean that's still better than everything else we listed here today, I'm getting so passionate. I'M like right up in the camera. You know, but the the next best thing is: if we're gon na nitpick keratin bonds is a flat bond now at first I thought, oh, my God. If we make it flat, those sides are going to be like razor blades. It'S going to be sharp. It'S going to cut into a person's head, it never does. I mean sometimes what seems like something on paper isn't really true in real life, and so you take that section. Like you just said, we put a keratin bond in there. We just heat it up and it spreads and we fold it the hair, the section everything stays at the right width, and so then it doesn't come together, flare out like a ponytail and it blends so much better. You must be reading something you look like you. Uh went a little catatonic on me, you're like yes, I fell asleep, that's funny. Do we have comments or something you need to read? Do you ever do one-on-one video chat or consult for people doing extensions at home? I just found your method of teaching the easiest to follow and you answer a lot of detailed questions thanks, but that question is for Bernard. I don't count here so that that's what it says on the comments, so I is it we don't know if that's a hairdresser or not right, not sure if it's you, I'm not sure, if you're a hairdresser. So what I will say is this: you can always contact us at our office and you can get a hold of either one well, you want to get a hold of Bernard, but I mean if, if, if you ever need second place, I mean I'm available too. I guess yeah, so let me give you I guess we could put it in the in the description in the description yeah. If you ever want more information about anything or get in contact with me, we'll put it in the description, but just a real, quick uh. 985-781-5011 one is our office number we're in uh. The New Orleans area in Louisiana Chicago is 847-741-5000. Okay, well, that's easier to remember five thousand, so, anyway uh. I know we get pretty passionate about the specifics of the technique, since I'm doing that, I'm going to mention one more thing: most of the companies that heat bonds up with that tool it get that tool gets way too hot hotter than most flat irons or curling. Irons and the company we decided to kind of team up with 15 years ago. Was SHE hair and SHE hair has the lowest heat in the market, so it made it even less damaging, I say less no damage because the heat you probably know better than me because you're like a nerd when it comes to specifics in this area, but the Heat is so low that it's not even as hot as a flat iron or a curling iron. It does not burn or damage the hair when you're doing the SHE hair keratin bond, but I did great lengths for a long time that sucker gets really hot. We had that machine in the in the salon for a long time and I burnt the heck out of my fingers with the SHE hair tool, I'm able to actually wipe the extra excess keratin off the tool like that and not burn my fingers. Do you know how hot it gets? Do you happen to know the temperatures? Yes, I'm pulling up google over here, yes yeah. I just the machine automatically comes on Celsius, so I know the Celsius numbers. Here'S um here is the difference. We, I know okay, so our machine is um yeah, our our machine is in Celsius and we say to use approximately and thirty to a hundred and forty like between 120 and 140 is what we say right so 120, most of the time. So, what's 120 Celsius in Fahrenheit I'll have to look that up. I know 140, which is like the top of the tier of what we could, because I know this because of class 140, which is the top of what you know. Everybody blasts the machine to the max temperature right: yep 140 degrees Celsius is is 285 284 or 285 Fahrenheit, most flat. Irons and curling irons are four hundred and four hundred a hundred and fifty degrees, which is the max temperature, is three three. Oh two Fahrenheit over three yeah yeah and so - and you had mentioned hair's burning point at one point: uh 392., so we're like basically 100 degrees below the burning threshold right. So then, you add a piece of keratin in there and the extension hair is absorbing some of that heat you're, never even getting close to burning hair off. So that's one of the reasons why I also like SHE hair when we went with that lower. It wasn't always the lowest temperature that was an advancement they made along the way, there's always increase in the advancements along the way. I think we've beat this uh topic to death yeah. Thank you. Rj 120 degrees Celsius is 248 Fahrenheit. I was just googling it over here and he popped it in. Oh, that's what I use I'm doing it at 248 degrees for you, Americans, on the imperial system. So here here's an interesting fact too. If I can have my moment here, the boiling point of water is 212., so you're only 36 degrees over the boiling point of water, so you're retaining moisture in the natural hair that you're attaching the keratin bond to so you're, not killing the keratin the protein. In the keratin, either the amino acids and the keratin that make up the protein you're not burning those and melting. I hate it when people say we're melting extensions to the hair. That'S just so disgusting to me. You know that means you're using high heat. That'S bad! That'S right right, and so I guess anytime time you make something from a hard to a soft state, it's melting in some people's eyes, but you're right, the technical terminology. It'S not it's, not melting and we're not melting the client's hair either. I think everybody knows. Oh, we offered a challenge in a YouTube video recently. I know we talked a little bit about it, but listen guys if you subscribe here or like, and you want to try to be a healthier person. Watch our sleep, video, listen, my sleep. Have you watched it? Eddie my sleep, video is actually me videoing the rain in my backyard, with the woods line. It'S pretty beautiful. Is that what that was yeah? It was my backyard and it's just the sound of rain for like eight hours, just because some people need a little noise to go to sleep. I I've we've had my wife had a friend stay over one time and I'm like what? What is that noise? And it's like this sleep machine and like it's not like an air conditioning unit. A lot of people love sounds my whole life. I like the peace and quiet. I grew up in a quiet neighborhood, but I know a lot of people grow up in louder. Bigger cities neighborhoods and need some other drowning out noise to sleep to so it's a popular thing on YouTube, bunch of different sounds and everything. So I did a rain, video and and guys try it to feel a little healthier by getting better sleep at night. Getting to that deep rem, sleep I want to, we don't have time to go into great detail about it, but no my my brother-in-law was actually uh. Dom was actually explaining this to me because I suffer from uh from a very particular type of insomnia, really yeah and my my actually my younger sister and I both of us have the same type of insomnia and she's been to sleep clinics. You know, we've we've been to therapies, we've done all kinds of things he found. He found this this video that had like delta waves in it, and then you can go up to theta waves and that'll help relax you down into a natural sleep right, your so compliment to you, your rain. Video puts me somewhere in between. I got your video tested, it puts me somewhere in between so uh yeah. Your video actually helps me so so yes, I actually do use it. Thank you. That'S cool! That'S cool! It'S nice to know it's and you've visited my house. You'Ve seen my backyard. I can only imagine how awesome it is when it's raining over there, that would be cool. Oh sit on the back porch and watch the rain on the rocking chair feel like an old man, but it's so freaking relaxing and now we got the pool in so the water hitting the water. Oh, my God, it's nice other than I can't swim during the rain, because the lightning and the thunder - but it is beautiful and relaxing I mean it - would be electrifying experience. You should try it yeah. A lot of people use awesome. A lot of people around the world are commenting now and saying they're watching the video or listening to the video. Some people are watching it, but putting the light down kind of low and just listening through the night and uh it's it's helping us with uh our channel. Also so I mean it'll help us go into a profitable mode and get paid for what we're doing at some point, but um I was going to go a little further. You know no, it's not why, but I mean it was because it was no. You wanted to help me, oh well. I want you to help me too. All right, you're done I'm going back to work. Yeah me too yeah, because this this thing, this ain't paying we got ta, we got ta, make some money. Okay. So, yes, we are gon na use our own advice on how to become a six-figure income hairstylist and go to work and we're going back to work. Yes, thank you, everybody for watching. We appreciate you all leave us a comment. Let us know what you want to hear next and we'll catch you all next week. Thank you.

Amber Tornga: Kendall loves watching your videos!!!! At 7yrs old & sick at home watching your chats she asks…… Mom do they ever do shoutouts at the end?? She’d love one

clipinqueen: Wow! Great discussion that doesn't necessarily just complement the trends happening today in extensions. I love that you both are brave enough to speak some truth! Thank you. I also wanted to note or add that long ago, a lot of people used to complain about keratin bonds being damaging. Do you think it could have been (or still is) the issue of removal? Can it not be difficult to remove and thus become damaging?

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