Frontal Quick Weave Detailed Tutorial

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Back with another tutorial straight into it, starting off with one braid to the back, we're gon na sew that braid up like I do everything else sew the braid up, and this is going to create. You know a flat Foundation as well as keeping any like. Braid ends out of the way like the older, the style gets, the more the bread will stay out the way, and now I'm spraying with the got to be freeze, blast spray um, and this will just give her a flatter mold down blow drying. It molding it down um, as you can see, I already put the new cap on and I'm sewing it back down. Now I'm cutting the excess hold on wait. I think I didn't skip the um. I think I didn't skip the whole portion y'all. Let me go back and look for this other video okay, so I guess I didn't record that part, but what I did was put the cap on and I sprayed the edges down with the got to be freeze, blast spray and I put her under the dryer Or you can blow dry it yourself and now back to uh cutting the excess stocking cap, oh from the perimeter of her head um. Now I'm putting on the first layer of lace glue and I'm gon na just spread that out now here, I'm putting on the second layer and I'm going to spread that out as well. Now I always multitask. So when I'm waiting for the glue to dry, I'm either, you know doing some more plucking on the frontal or I'm bonding in you know the back always multitasking, although they help the process go by so much quicker. So, as you can see how much I've already gotten done, just by waiting for the glue to dry now, I'm going to do the third layer, and I do about three to four layers depending on how I feel or what I'm doing or how I'm multitasking. Now we're putting the frontal on so for this I only did three layers and that's just fine. Some people may just do one, you know and that's just fine, you do what works for you. I always start with one side and then I bring the next side down. I start I always put my fences on from side to side. Unless they have like a Widow's Peak, then I would start in the middle. Now I'm doing the next side laying that down and eventually when I have someone you know with uh defined where those Peak then I'll show you guys um, why I lay it down from the middle first, the frontal um here I'm putting on the the milk band. You can order this stuff, my website, corn closet.com, and I drive that um. The milk bin leaves a line in the frontal. So I just like to comb that out with the hot comb and now I'm basically tapping I'm tap, cutting the lace off the excess lace off of the the wig. You see that white we're gon na get rid of that, and this is how you get rid of it: spray the freeze, blast spray on it and it's gon na like soak into the cap and then you're gon na blow dry. It - and this isn't it's just gon na make it melt even more like this is like a trick to me like, because some people really don't know they think makeup will do the job, but this really helps like their liquid seeps into the adhesive liquid seeps into The the lace, that's why it's also important for the lace to be thin, the thin the lace, the better the milk now we're about to sew the back down, and in order to do that, we have to move this hair out of our way to get a Good flat sew down, if you want to start at the corner and as you can see, I'm sewing down like at an angle and I'm pulling, because you want to make sure that frontal is flat. Okay, so you keep pulling down at an angle you putting the needle in like downwards at an angle, so it can continue to pull like as you're going up. You don't want to put too much tension on your head. It'S like I'm not doing it tight, but I'm doing it tight enough that the the uh, the back of the frontal, is flat. You want to make sure that's flat, because this will decrease any lumps or wrinkles when you're trying to do your part in the frontal and you're just gon na keep doing this halfway up. You don't want to sew in all the way until you get to the other end. Why? Because you want to make sure it's even in flat all the way around stop right about there, which is pretty much halfway. Then we're gon na go to the other side and do the same exact thing. Get the clip and move the excess hair out of the way so that we can sew down flat and secure same thing. Push the needle in at an angle, pull make sure it's flat push the niggly push the needle in at an angle and pull to make sure it's flat, and you want to make sure you pull it down like going towards the air and not pull back towards The back of her head, because this can cause you to push the frontal back and it can make the frontal like start sliding back, and you don't want that. So you want to make sure you're pulling downwards towards the side of her head like down towards her ear, and we just met at the middle and that's going to give you a flat sew down for the back of her frontal. So, as you can see, I'm more than halfway up with the tracks being bonded in and I'm pretty much almost done, y'all We Just Gon na Keep bonding and bonding and bonding up until the last like right right behind the band you, never you don't glue on The top of the band! Why? Because it's going to create a lump, because that band in the back that little strip is pretty thick. I never glue on the top of that little white strip because you want to make sure it's flat when the goal is back and when you start parting. So here I'm pulling out her sideburns, and here I'm pulling up the next Sideburn. Now I'm putting out her sides for her baby hairs, and you know what I used to do, which, which was, I found the big difference, and I actually learned this from a comment on Tick Tock. I used to part the baby hairs out until somebody told me to try combing it out. You see how I like kind of like scrape it out instead of parting, it like I'm, scraping it out, and that gives it a much more natural look. You can't see where you know the baby heels are starting and stopping. It gives it a very natural look, and thank you shout out to whoever there was that uh wrote that comment, because I've been doing it ever since now her sides and her sideburns are out. She also uh. She let me know that she wanted that little, you know swoop in the middle. You know some people like it clean. I personally prefer to be clean right there in the middle, especially for a middle part, but you know everybody likes what they like. Now that the baby hairs are placed, I I'm cutting down at an angle and then the other side are going cut going upwards. So from the top part I cut one down and then like the back, that goes into the rest of the hair. I cut going up and that's it just makes it easier to lay the baby hairs. You didn't see me get to cut that, but I still cut it now. I'M using a coin closet wax, stick to brush those excess hairs back and to make sure it's shiny. When I start to flat iron and separate the hair before I put the tracks in between now even the middle part, whichever side of the side to begin to swoop in the opposite direction, that's the side that either cut the sides are cut going downwards. At an angle and the side, that's I'm brushing into the hair would be the the second side that I cut up into the angle. Now I'm curling the baby hairs with the small flat irons like um, a thing they call it. Well, I call it the pinky finger flat iron, a friendly tip before I mold my baby hairs down permanently. I spray it with the got to be freeze blast just to place them um after that I'll make sure I put all the hair up in the back. So that it can be easier right after I mold it with the mousse to put the paper wrap on it. So here I'm using the queen closet, Muse little moose to mold the baby hairs down it's gon na mold it down really good and still give it a soft look using the red tail comb. I swoop the hairs down and follow it with my fingers dragging down and I put her under the drying for about 10 minutes. It'S going to be a little hard or a little bit of a struggle trying to take off the paper. So you want to do this tediously taking down the hair now um and I'm gon na be before I cut the sides down. I part out my first part to start to glue the tracks in between and now glue tracks in between, because the frontal to me is never fully enough to match the back, especially when the frontal is in the same length as the bundles. So I glue tracks on the side to give it that fullness on the sides, as well as in the back and I'm doubling my tracks and I'm gluing on the side. Make sure that when you glue you leave a space in the front so that she will still be able to pull her hair up into a flat ponytail without any lumps or bumps or the track showing and of course, I'm doing the same thing. On the other side, make sure that when you part it out that the part is even with the other side and I'm doing the same thing, doubling the tracks and making sure that I glue it on and making sure that it's behind at least a half an Inch of her hairline now this would be the second section that I part out to double up on some tracks. Once again, you want to make sure you do it at least in half an inch behind the beginning of her hairline and to make sure that you do this. You can take the back of the Red Seal comb and separate it, and I'm going to continue to go side by side, making sure that it's evened out and doubling my tracks and gluing them. This is now the third section that I'm separating and I'm going to double up on some tracks once again making sure that it's behind the hairline at least in half an inch. I continue to do this until I got closer to the top, and this will be my last track. As you can see, I stopped this last double track up until, like the the side swoops of the baby hairs to the beginning of the side swoops of the baby hairs, because you want to make sure that top part is completely flat when we part out her Middle part, and now we're going to go towards the back of the frontal. The little space that we have is going to be like a little box that you have left we're going to pull out the back of that and make that flat. This will be the back of her part or where you want the part to end once again using the coin. Closet wax, stick we're gon na swipe down and then take the flat iron, make sure it's really really hot and bring it down and make it flat. Now we're gon na start doing the sides and we're going to go side by side, we're not going to just part straight from the middle and then try to get those big sections flat. We want it really really flat, so we're gon na do section by section. I don't care how little of hair is left we're still going to do section by section, even though it's a little box left we're still going to do a section by section um. These sides, with the frontals, aren't always flat enough for me, so the flat iron may not always make it flat with one swipe, so I definitely want to go over it again with the hot comb and I section out the next side and I'm going to swipe It with the wax stick and I'm gon na flat iron it based on the thickness. Sometimes I flat iron it, and sometimes I just hot comb it, but most times I always flat iron it. But sometimes it's not always flat enough for me, but you always want to use that hot comb after the sides, especially because sometimes the frontal just comes in in a certain direction where one side may be flatter than the other or one or a few hairs may Lay down in the right direction and The Others May lay in a separate Direction. Some frontals just come like that. I don't know why and the flat iron that I'm using is the um in Con Air Infinity Pro by Conair this flat iron. Never fails me guys. So, as you can see, I take teeny teeny bits and section it out, no matter how small that portion is, is that's left at the top? You still want to section it out. That'S how you're gon na get it really really flat. You don't want to just part it in the middle and then try to section those big pieces side by side. You definitely want to always section it out strand by strand just about and, as you can see, this is the last section that I'm going to flat iron um before we Define our middle part. Now, as you're section in and out you're not going to have the perfect middle part, so after you do that last section, you definitely want to go to the front of her head and find her middle from front to back and make sure it's straight in the Middle now, most clients will want the soup on the sides, like the three sections that the baby has, but not this one. So when it's natural hairs on the sides which she requested, I I don't uh swoop those and I don't cut it with the scissors. I shred it with the um with the eyebrow Archer or a razor, and this gives it a natural like natural ends when it's left out like this, my flatness job is just never done so here I am swiping uh the wax stick again on her top and I'M just making it even more and more and more and more flatter um, that's just what I like to do, and it also gives a luster and a shine at the foundation of the hair. Now what I didn't show on this video is that I flat irons. The rest of her hair, I flat on her bundles and I just suppressed everything all over again. I didn't show it on here and I also forgot to show how I defined my middle part. I'M sorry you guys, but, as you can see, I did find her middle and this is the end results when I say melted when I say slate. I also forgot to show you guys that I combed out her baby hairs from the mousse so that she can have a softer look. Oh my God. I promise I will next time but ain't. She melting y'all, queen that period

Khadijah W: OMG this is SOO useful please keep them coming

Jacklyn Altidor: This is do detailed

deseraymiles87:

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