At This Point.. #Naturalhair #Blackhair #Naturalhairproducts

I got attacked by a non-black person for making black hair products, so a customer emailed me saying: can I use your products when I have white straight hair and I honestly told her I wouldn't recommend, because my products are catered towards black hair and textured hair, so They wouldn't work for her hair and she told me I was racist for making products that only worked for black women. I should be making products that work for everyone. I just don't get it because they've always had iOS filled with hair products catered toward their hair. That'S why, when my followers asked, I created a hair care line to give black women more options same thing with them: selling out the meal organic oil just to incorrectly use it for a trend and then waste the bottle, and some women were commenting well, y'all's products Work so well for my hair. I need them you're telling me out of the hundreds of brands that have always catered towards your hair. You can't find one that works for you. You have to use black hair products, and I'm saying this because we can't use white products so if you're selling out ours we now have none like. I refuse to believe y'all, don't understand how selfish that is.

🌺 Blaque Hippie 🌺: *BUT IF YOU WOULD HAVE TOLD HER TO USE YOUR PRODUCTS, AND HER HAIR TURNED OUT WRONG, SHE'D BE FILMING A TIKTOK ON HER WAY TO THE COURTHOUSE! SMH* ‍♀️‍♀️ *EDIT:* * LATELY I'VE BEEN FEELING DOWN ABOUT HOW DIVIDED BW ARE BUT 10K LIKES (& MEGAN RECEIVING ALL THAT SUPPORT) DEFINITELY MAKES ME FEEL MORE CONNECTED!! ‍‍ I LOVE MY GWORLS!*

KMusic: As a White woman who has used products for Black hair: I'm sorry that you experienced this. You aren't racist. From personal experience: you are 100% right. They rarely work for our hair type. I've used Black hair products when my hair was unnaturally dry, but it any other time, it is a very bad fit. Keep making your products for your own folks and ignore the idiots who spread negativity. :)

🍄Mushroom Girl🍄: As a white female I just wanted to put out there that not all of us are like this. She is very selfish and you're doing the right thing by telling her no. I appreciate your work and products whether I can use them or not. Keep going girl because you are amazing

Maddie Castle: Im a white person. And if you told me you're products were made for people with textured hair, I would LISTEN and respect that. And I'd be on my way to find a product that works for my hair. Keep up the great work, I wish you the best!!

Megroll: As a white person, we don’t claim her lmao you go girl keep doing you

Robin Harding: I am whiter than white, but have fine tight spiral curls. It was a lovely black mom who first saw me looking confused in the textured hair aisle and asked if I was mixed, I said no and apologized because I was afraid I was being offensive even shopping, and she proceeded to laugh and smile and ask if she could touch my hair, and gave me the best advice that started me on understanding moisture, protein, and self hair love. Thank you to whoever she was. You changed everything with grace! And I’ll never take for granted my privilege, in shopping spaces or anywhere else

Làdy Alleta: I'm white but I do occasionally use black hair products for more of a mask because it does honestly work better. Plus I get to support great black entrepreneurs too.

Dawn of Time: My mother is a mixed Native American and White woman but her hair texture is really curly and wavy. She went to the store and honestly, the only hair products that work for her are what are catered towards black hair. She felt awful about using them until a black woman told her that she's fine with using it because she needs it. And honestly, I appreciate the stuff you and others make because it makes brushing my mom's hair for her 1000x easier. Thank you for actually making sure your people have what they need. And that isn't even the only story about black hair products that work for people I know. I have a mixed friend who is super pale but her bio father is black. She is afraid of using black hair products because she doesn't want to seem racist for it. I've always felt so bad because she deserves to have good hair as well.

Rebecca Lambert: I still remember when my mixed cousins came to visit from their small town in Colorado to our 45% white suburb and were just shocked at all the hair care items our store had for their hair. And it wasn't even that much! Thank you for what you're doing :)

Jasmine Hall: I’m just grateful you stood up and said something. Black women have very limited options for our hair and we can’t use the wide range of other products out there because it damages our hair. Kudos to you and thank you for giving us a change to achieve something we have struggle with for a long time. I have a 13 year old daughter and she has pretty long hair but some of the non black kids at her school always tell her stuff like… isn’t your hair supposed to be short? Why do you have longer hair. She is natural and it’s already hard to get her to embrace her crown. But this helped to give her more confidence.❤❤

magnolia: as a hispanic girl with straight hair you keep doing you bae i may not physically understand the struggles of finding hair care products that work due to my hair type but it understand discrimination and im so glad your doing you edit: FOR THE PPL BEING RAGING ASSHOLES LEMME EXPLAIN. I'm appreciating the fact she took matters into her own hands and made a hair care line for people who's hair types are RARELY included when it comes to products. I DID NOT OR WILL NOT BUY HER PRODUCTS. As for the fact that my hair isn't curly. Black ppl aren't the only ones with curly hair yet you guys are the most discriminated against. Just because i am supporting a business doesn't mean i'm buying her products. THANK YOU AND STOP SPAMMING MY FUCKING PHONE.

Aubrey Holst: I'm white and I have mildly textured 3A, 2C hair, and honestly buying products has been so frustrating for me because I'm allergic to most products, specially the synthetic emulsifiers. I break out in hives and patchy rashes. I wasn't able to buy products for my hair because of my family using them when they have straight thin hair and I don't feel like I can buy products like these because so often I'm told I don't need them and sometimes brands won't tell me the ingredients so I can tell my allergies.

Aurora Borealis: As someone who has no dark hair. White as a paint. I really think that person was stupid for telling you you’re racist ‍♀️ lmao I think more people should be like you and make products for specific type of hair so anyone can search up and use.

Joanne Arnold: I would’ve said “Okay girl! Then you go ahead and create your own brand and products catered to you.” I’m so happy you stood your ground on that, the hair products I see for POC or a certain hair type is usually at the very end of the aisle and has like 3 small spots for options and the options are extremely limited. With my hair, I can just grab a bottle of basically whatever I want and be fine. Instead of demanding something of others and demanding them to create something for you specifically, how about people like that make THEIR OWN products. And since most people obviously can’t or won’t, they’ll just need to look for what suits them. And let’s just take away race completely, that customers skin tone isn’t going to change the fact that her hair type makes the products not suitable for her. (Also P.S. I love your hair and I’d buy your products if I had the hair type for it )

Sarahspaceslippers: It's like asking Long Tall Sally why they don't make clothes for short people with small feet

UdoADHD: That customer is delusional. There is no product that works for everyone

LadyDeath: My cousin is half and ended up with ringlets instead of textured hair, but she learned how to do textured hair anyway, and she's very good at it. I'm so proud of her.

☆sofia☆: I'm a white girl and I totally agree, us white girls has many products so I think it's nice that you make hair products for black women

Kartan Kane: You keep going you, sis! There's like hardly any products out there dedicated to black hair care. A woman prides herself on her hair and development. Don't let that one bad egg ruin it for people whose demographic is underserved! Keep it up. Motivation is elevation.❤

Queen B: As a white woman with extremely thick, coiled hair that used to be very dry and would frizz if one drop of rain fell, I cannot fully express how life changing it was for me when I wandered into the ethnic section in the hair care aisle! It was such a small space on the shelves that I hadn't really noticed it before when you compare it to the amount of space other products get. It's a shame that people who don't need it bought it all up just for a trend. And it's down right ridiculous for someone to call this lady out for making products that cater to a specific group that really needs it!

Missery: “Product that work for everyone” is unrealistic. Everyone’s hair is different and has different needs.

Peachy pineapples: As a white woman it’s mind boggling that people will call stuff like this “black privilege” like bro how tf is it privilege. We have stuff just for our hair too.

Sami Lea: I understand you completely and it isn't racist at all! The things we succeed in are things that we know just like you know what works on your hair and similar hair. Also your response to her was very professional and mature

Elise: as a white person, we can’t use hair products that are made for poc. why? because, like she stated in the video, our hair isn’t made for it. just like how our hair isn’t made to handle poc hair styles (i.e, box braids, butterfly locs, dreads, etc…) so please, if you’re white, just use white hair products. it’s not that hard. it’s understandable if you have thicker hair like poc

Barbara Domer-Hostetler: Before my hair turned white (and strangely, fairly straight), it was coarse & frizzy, and there were a couple of products made for black women that I used on my hair that smoothed it out & made it shine. They were recommended to me by a black angel at Walmart & they worked better than any “white” products I had ever tried.

Antipodia S: I learned my lesson the hard way so now I only ever use the detangler. My hair is curly and will tangle at the slightest breeze and it's the same for my daughter. I only buy what I'll need in my household cause a little goes a long way for us and I try to never take the last one. It saved us when my daughter went through a stint where she wouldn't let anyone near her hair for weeks. I have so much respect for the time and effort it takes for yall to manage and style your hair. Keep doing you girl.

RobinCastell7827: Dealing with people like her must be hard. Having hair products catered to different hair types is important and was ignored for a long time. Your products are awesome and keep doing what you're doing❤

ariiiii: we need to have more brand that aren’t just for Straight hair because everyone has a different hair texture, then when people who have textured hair can find products for their mostly white people with straight hair steal them and complain that it isn’t for their hair. Your business I bet helps so many people who need your products, you are doing great

Lisa Minnix: I'm not traditional "white" but for skin and hair purposes, I am..... And I'm so happy seeing more custom products on the market that are made for, and by, ethnic women. We are all humans and equal but not made the same. I watched friends struggle and am happy for them to be recognized more in products and have the (almost) same availability now.

RandoDum: IMAGINE GETTING MAD THAT SOMEONE'S HAIR PRODUCT DOESN'T WORK ON YOUR HAIR WHEN IT'S *INTENDED* FOR THE OPPOSITE KIND OF YOUR HAIR

The GGH: lmaooo as soon as you said “straight white hair” i remember in cosmetology school some girl thought i was being racist for not using the same products on my hair that i did on my friends. i’m like “her hair is different from mine. if i put my products on her hair, it won’t work effectively” it’s okay to be different guys!! that’s what being human is

Maddie: As a white person I totally agree with you. You can never have enough products that work for your hair, no matter what thickness, curling pattern or texture. And there just aren't as many for thick, coily hair as there are for straight thin hair, that's just a fact.

isha Massoud: You are right one time when I was in NY I ended up buying some random products ( in Harlem somewhere ) omg I could not believe what you guys put up with Before I threw it away I toke a photo of the label and sent to my sister who has degree in bio- chemistry and she said that almost all what’s in those products is illegal in most of EU and in most of Asia Why is it ok for companies to poison and destroy black women’s hair ? Don’t you all have laws in US ? That’s some nasty discrimination

lila 💗: literally ignore the karens ur gorgeous and what u do in creating more options for black woman is amazing

Anabella Cross: This is hard for me to hear as a white person with very textured hair. Because I can see both sides. I have been straightening my hair for years because there were no products I could find. Then, when I started going natural, I had SO MANY people saying negative things to me and calling me racist for using these "black" brands. Tough situation

IllyrianPrinces00: As a white Mediterranean woman with fine curly hair, I have always struggled to find products that don't weigh my hair down. I remember when curly hair was not in-style and the black hair products were a tiny tiny spot in the isle and the bottom shelf. I am very proud that 1. Curly hair is very accepted now and that's largely due to the black community working hard on acceptance of their natural hair. That being said I love and support the progress we have made as a society. I am experiencing hair loss due to pregnancies and I don't really care what isle the product that works for my hair is located. I will purchase it. I am happy that I have choices now that work and I have the education to teach my girls so they don't fry their curls like I did.

noah: i’m white and jewish and have the accompanying jewish hair. my mom has always helped me pick out hair products that are good for our thick course curly jewish hair, which often ends up being products catered toward black women. we’ve both been asked by blonde straight-haired white women what we use to get our curls, and so we told them what products we use. inevitably, they came back to us frustrated that their hair didn’t curl. we were confused, and as they kept talking we realized they thought we didn’t have naturally curly hair. they started talking about how products should be more “inclusive,” and the first time i heard that i was in complete shock. just goes to show that people can be really stupid sometimes

Mary Evans: FACTS SISTAR! You did the right thing, I m sick of them doing the same thing…the entitlement is insane!

Ravenn Kings: "If you buy our products, we now have none" is the equivalent to saying "Immigrants are the reason we have no jobs." Its too many and too much of EVERYTHING to be running out of something in America.

JacksYaCrackers: Do it girl ,get it I'ma write books just for us they can feel how they feel, we need stuff just for the representation of us black ppl period. You're so pretty much love

The Jabberwock: I'm white ( like a ghost ) and when I was really young my hair had like the tiniest wave in it, it's also really thicck. As I got older it got frizzier ( like humid summers were and still are the bane of my existence). Halfway through my sophomore year ( right when lockdown happened ) my hair went from halfway down my back to my shoulders, then my chin, then short on the sides and long on top, then I got a buzz cut and let it grow out and got a buzz cut again. I'm letting it grow out again and I'm realizing my hair probably had some form of curl to it ( my mom's hair is curly and my dad's wavey ) I honestly don't know where to begin caring for my hair properly if I'm right. Was wondering if all ya’ll have any tips and suggestions that would be useful for someone who's just starting.

M.B.B is beautiful: Everyone has different hair. Different colors, different thickness, different texture. So, selling the products for just a white person or just a black person Is not racist. But saying that it's for ONLY a white or black person is racist. Say something like "The products are just better for people with curly hair or straight hair." Not that it's best for black women.

I’m in La La land 777: They don’t like when we have our own, some of them feel they are entitled to everything that everybody else has. Bless you for being transparent with her because any other sales representative would’ve just sold the product to her to make the sale whether it worked for her or not. You have integrity that’s great❤

ExplosionMare: As a white person with textured hair, I immensely appreciate products catered to my hair style because they just work so much better. Straight haired products work fine but they don't really manage the frizz well.

Marlee Piercy: I am so sorry you have to deal with shit like that … how she gonna say you being racist when your products just simply wouldn’t work on her hair type lmao it’s crazy you were just being honest

Kyla: There is nothing wrong with catering to a specific thing. I would never go into a store that caters to sizes 0-8 when I’m a size 18-20 and complain. Not everything needs to be so inclusive. We need brands that specialize in certain things in order to get good quality items that work for that specific group of people. My mom used to make chocolates and other sweets and constantly had people complaining that there weren’t sugar free options. Find something else that works for you instead of bringing someone down for not having what your looking for.

Mamato5sassholes: I’m a mom to mixed kids, 2 have 4C hair. I have wavy hair and process it a lot . I have used my kiddos hair products, shampoo/conditioner/leave in/ detangler/ and curl cream. The curl cream was life changing. Yes, some of us glow in the dark girls can use your products. It’s stuff like this that kept me from trying these products and realizing my hair needed the extra moisture and care. The absolute worst reaction to black hair products for straight nonporous hair is that it’ll be weighed down or look greasy.

Wendy Bear: I’m Caucasian and Native American. There are a few products that are made for textured hair that also work for my hair, just as a few of the vast amount of products catered to my hair that work for textured hair. I’m happy when I see more products out on the shelves for you who have textured hair! It’s horrible that it’s taken so long for them to start being made. I hope you have a lot of success and more products become available!

Tree on a Hill: Yes, yes, that customer was very much harmed by the fact that you're helping people who don't have many options, even though not catering to her isn't harming anyone. I love the end result, the ponytail was gorgeous :)

☾⧼༺Angel Mist༻⧽☾: I’m a white girl with 3c/4a curls, and let me tell you they do cater to white people with non curly hair. It’s ridiculous, it was ridiculously hard for me to take care of my hair with no idea of how to since both my parents were white and had not so curly hair and we are the only family members with curly hair, from the lack of knowledge and wrong products for my hair it got so damaged I had to shave it all off.( that and another reason I won’t get into ) so I’m so happy people are starting to cater to people who actually need it because they have hair that’s really curly like myself. My hair is now healthy and not damaged in the slightest from me purchasing hair products from people who have really curly hair (mainly black people). And I understand 3c/4a isn’t the hardest to maintain compared to 4b+ but it was still really difficult since I’ve never been around people with my hair type for the longest time and both my parents have 3a- curls.

CaptainFarland: As a White Female, I would NEVER use a black-hair product on my hair. It would not work right, and would make it look stiff. I think it's awesome that there's black hair products in stores now, and that there's more options for people!

Anna Taymond: “Works for everyone” doesn’t really, work for anyone. There’s so much diversity as far as individual needs go.

LitRuffEE: As a white female I think it’s so horrible of that girl to complain when there are so many products out there for light, straight hair. I admire the work you are doing, don’t give this girl another thought because she’s clearly being delusional.

Charmin Savage: As a white woman who has seen the availability of products for black hair grow from one 4-foot shelf to an entire 4-foot section in the past 30 years I fully agree that the miniscule availability of products for black hair is terrible. I have thin, fine, pin straight hair... I can't imagine the nerve it would take to complain about the 40-foot (or more) selection available to me and whine when told that the product designed for courser, more textured hair would not work on my hair type. Using those products one my hair would be as ridiculous as using a dark foundation on my pale complexion. Some people just need to complain to be happy.

Avery Acres: I love that you are creating products for those who didn’t have choices before. I am white and I am good. You do you!!!

Katie Gilpin: You're doing great. Keep doing you and introducing amazing variety to support the people who, till now, haven't been. It's not about colour, it's not about race, it's about the hair type. My hair is red, straight, thick but smooth. Not a hope that products for textured hair will be right for mine

Just another Person On the Internet: As a person who has really curly hair, let me just say that it is SO FUCKING HARD TO FIND PRODUCTS THAT WORK! People who have straight, smooth hair could seriously walk into Sephora or Ulta and find any shampoo that can work for them. And the special stuff isn’t cheap, it’s really expensive.

Serenity Acanthus: As someone who has white straight hair, this is ridiculous. Y'all have to do so much to your hair to make it do what you want it to. We can literally do anything to our hair and it'll be fine. Y'all deserve to have products catered specifically for your hair type. There aren't nearly enough products for textured hair.

Space Song: 25% offended, 75% UR SLAYING OML. 100% really happy with what your doing, keep going!

Audrey Beauchamp: The fact that different products work for different products isn't racist, my goodness. If that were the case, we wouldn't have so many different products on the shelves. This woman is specializing in selling something she knows a lot about and sees a market for, there's nothing wrong with that.

Randomer: Us white people are already privledged to have almost all beauty brands have products made for us. We have many options, however inclusivity is not good in hair and makeup industry. We should be grateful that we already have options and it’s selfish to ask for more. You’re doing a great job creating products for people with black hair, i think it really helps people! Keep up the good work:)

Shannon Stram: Baby girl don't allow these people to make you out to be something you are not. As a hairdresser with long straight hair, I am so very proud of you, I watch your videos all the time, it is so fascinating to me the products you put out there........ Ignore people like that they're just looking for trouble.......

may: I'm white, my mom has pretty stroght hair but my dad (who is also white) actually has some good curl to his hair but because my mom had full custody of me I treated my hair like she treated hers and with my dad almost always having his hair buzzed down he just washed with whatever and it didn't matter, it wasn't till one day when my hair was over the moon dry that my mixed fiance had me use his leave in which is also a curl activator that my hair started acting better and when I went to a new Stylist who, after washing my hair, asked if I had naturally wavy hair and she taught me how to deal with it! Even though I've been taught that i need curly hair products I still feel so out of place buying them and I don't want to be looked at like I'm just trying to follow a trend, so tbh I always do curbside pickups when I need my hair stuff...

Tiffanie 89: I have naturally curly/frizzy hair. When I was a teenager in TX all my friends were black. They all relaxed their hair. We were too young to realize that their products wouldn’t work on me so one of them relaxed mine. “It should make it super flat and you won’t have to straighten it anymore.” Then she was crying because my hair was falling out and stretchy and we were PANICKING. Years later my hair still isn’t back to normal

Adelina Armstrong: non-blk textured hair haver here: SHE HAD STRAIGHT HAIR???? LMAO WHAT WAS SHE THINKING also thank you guys for making great products that leave my weird scots-irish curls FAR less crispy!

Sylvia Martinez: As a business woman you found your client niche and fill their hair needs. Absolutely nothing racist about that. You created and sell specialty products. ❤. God bless you and your business

Howard Howdy: This reminds me of this time a guy was complaining that a barber shop had turned him down for being white and was saying it was an example black privilege. I had to explain to him that they didn’t turn him down because he was white, but instead because they were inexperienced with Caucasian hair. If anything, they were doing him a favor. They could’ve accepted his money and given him a terrible haircut, but instead they decided to give up his money so that he could get a nice haircut somewhere else.

Tina So Blessed: This reminds me of a product my sister used to put in her hair in the 60s, it was called "Dipty-Do", it was like a blue gel, thank goodness my sister had very curly gorgeous hair, so it did alright in her, but I remember my oldest sister trying Dipty-Do, her hair knotted up so tight, you just can't put anything in your hair!

hbk: I’m a hairstylist and no one product should work for every hair type! Products should absolutely be catered to specific hair types and needs

Brandon Dickerson: I agreed with every word up to the point where you talked about selling out products. I would consider this a good thing, it means the product is selling more than it can produce. The solution is to expand the operation to meet the consumer demand. When you say what you said all I hear is that you don't want the business to grow. You should want as many people buying the product as possible so that the business that makes it will thrive and keep selling the product. I don't really see the logic in blaming the consumer, it's the manufacturer that's failing to meet the demands of the market.

adora hoyte: Wow, I have a widow's peek just like you and I never part my hair in the middle cuz of how the hairline is and it's just so awkward. but watching how you did this, I'm definitely going to give it a try. It looks nice. This is honestly the first time I've seen someone with a peek do their edges.

Trainerless Eevee: As a white woman with thick wavey hair, don't give those people space in your head or heart. You're doing an amazing job and shouldn't be talked down to because a Karen is butt hurt. YOU'RE HAIR LOOKS AMAZING BTW

Green Bunny: My friend with hair that’s textured and very hard to find products for was just complaining about how they have aisles of hair care for people with simple non-textured hair and the stuff they have for people with her kind of hair is always sold out because the people that don’t need it, buy it. I could never understand her struggles because I have straight easy to care for hair. But I have to say, it’s very hard for people to find the right stuff since we all have different hair and are all sensitive and react to things differently. It sucks that we don’t have enough for people that don’t have the most common hair. ‍♀️

Yes.: I'm a white girl with super curly hair and I have never found a product that worked very well. I've tried CHI, Tressame, and a lot more, and none have made my hair feel right. I understand what you're trying to say about the "not being able to find one in the isles made for white person hair." But for some people such as myself, nothing that we've tried for white person hair works. I think at this point, I'd be open to trying anything for my hair to be nice and actually work well. No, I most certainly do NOT think you're racist. Not even a bit! I think that instead of telling them that it wouldn't be a good idea, though, you could say "Yes, go ahead and order! But I warn you that it might not work as well for your type of hair."

Azelia: I LOVE the style you did with your hair and want to ask if you would or wouldn't recommend using the same products you used in the video for a white person with curly hair. I have no idea how no one else has asked from the comments I've seen they are talking about the story your telling. I 100% agree because even if a white person with curly hair asks to use it should try other brands unless your hair leans a lot closer to a colored person's curly hair [BTW IS AMAZING]

colby hickey: Literally look at a dollar tree- the hair care section for black hair and textured hair is TINY- there's a whole big ass section for white ppl hair. How can we complain? There's literally no options for black men or women who want to save money at dollar tree or dollar general. So that's not fucking fair that the lady was saying she was racist for that. She's literally doing the best thing for ppl who want good products for a reasonable amount of money. There's TONS of shops for white hair/straight hair. You're doing amazing keep it up and don't let these ungrateful ppl disrespect you.

Amysaurus: A lot of it comes down to people wanting what they can't have. Folks like me (paler than a cave troll, untextured hair) see the amazing things you can do with your hair texture, products, and styles, and often don't think about the implications/consequences of trying them on ourselves. You should never feel pressured to cater to people who aren't willing to educate themselves, and I'm so proud of you for standing your ground and speaking up about this. Y'all deserve access to and availability of products meant for YOUR hair type

QUEEN JOJO: I love the fact that both the b n w people supporting her thnx this is one step closer to a united community

Luis Cheddar: No products work for everyone, and all the point you made were great! I personally think its fine if everyone wants to buy the shampoo, conditioner, and hair masks of the brand (any curly hair brand). It really does upset me when they waste the product and throw it, then dog on it bc it doesn't work for straight hair. It wasn't made with you in mind, it was made for us

Jodice Edwards: Yes ! Im mixed and only time I actually recommend a black hair care product is when someone has tight curls and the white products aren’t working for them. I recommended afrosheen to a young kid with a “ Jew fro” who tried to straighten it lord his hair was French fried and had died. But after conditioning and a new haircut it worked out. He found a couple products that really gave it shine and control

Carlene Palmer: Your hair is so beautiful. Your so correct and on point that there are literally 1000 of products. You are not rasis in no way shape or form. Maybe she liked the way they smelled or something or she was just was looking for something to complain about. Don't listen to the haters.

𝖌𝖎𝖛𝖊𝖓𝖌𝖗𝖆𝖈𝖊: Some people will never understand how stupid they sound. it’s giving, entitled. ❤ keep doing you, serving queens and ignore the dumb ass morons. ❤

Janinia Wilson: Everything isn't for EVERYBODY! PERIODT! I swear some people just want to be victimized so bad, girl keep marketing your black hair products for black people ONLY! I LOVE IT!

ryah *: As a person that’s half white and has thin straight hair, I would not be able to use y’all’s products strictly for the reason that usually products for black and/or textured hair, weigh down my hair and make it very oily because products like that tend to have more moisture in them and they’re usually heavier. I agree that anyone with hair like mine or naturally straight hair should not use products like this

Scara: I have a mixed friend with beautiful textured curly hair but she can’t take care of it properly with the lack of good products so she just puts it up in a bun most of the time… She’s tried getting trims but the hairstylists almost never know how to cut it well….I myself kinda want to learn how to style and take care of textured hair so when we move in together I can bring out her beautiful just like me who has straight slick hair. ❤❤

Jamie Williams: I hear you kyla keep on doing you! I agree with you percent

PuppetOnStrings: As a white woman, I am so sorry. SHE came to YOU didn't like your answer, and then started attacking. That's not right, at all. She doesn't understand that white people have it easy when it comes to hair products. You're trying to help a community that largly gets ignored, and this lady is mad that you aren't catering toward someone who has tons of options. And you're right, we shouldn't use black hair products, because we have so many options, it leaves no options for yall. I'm honestly so sick of white people thinking everything has to be for them, I'm truly, deeply sorry

Jelly emo: I fully fully understand that, but I do have very thick, frizzy, wavy hair from my native American heritage. Using products designed for black textured hair actually really helps. I've tried hundreds of dollars worth of different products specifically for white hair and i have not found one that works for my hair. My cousin is mixed and did my hair once with her products and it was the best my hair had ever been. So please also take this into consideration. Like I said though I am fully with you and your opinion. This is just my personal opinion on it.

Melia Brady-Smith: I'm so sorry people do that stuff it's so childish. Just keep going girl. You are so young to have your own beauty products. Inspiring love, inspiring ❤️ I'm subscribing either way. It's always to keep up with EVERYTHING

Dream To Be Free: As a white girl with straight blonde hair… I completely agree with you. It’s just another example of someone letting their stupid entitlement get to their head.

Tovi NMD: Felt. I am a ginger. It's hard to find stuff for us, too. Stuff for most hair types just breaks my hair or causes it to frizz. I had to turn to pet shampoos for actual results. I currently use BioGroom Fluffy Puppy or Mane And Tail. Nothing else works.

SAE Mother to Daughter: They got more hair care products for Caucasians then for us blacks. Since Lord knows when. We started to develop our own because-they don’t know our hair types . How she gone call that a racist development

Kris Hebert-Bellard: I have super coiled dry hair. I had to figure out what to use growing up and it was always black owned products that worked. I don’t think people with board straight hair should be ignorant, but for me if I didn’t have those products I wouldn’t have these beautiful curls in my hair. With that being said I understand what you mean, just some people who aren’t black need products too…bc hell, we never fit in with black nor white. Much love and success. ❤

Alaedra: *SHE KNEW!!!* She just wanted to argue. My response back wouldve been a series of laughing emojis and a read so hard she wouldve thought she was in a library.

LunaHyacinth: Of all the options for moisturizing detangling conditioners I’ve found that the ones intended for use in black hair works best. My hair is thick and will get matted when I wash or leave it down overnight.

Danielle Elizabeth Ann: No, I admire you for taking what you know and love and creating something from it. The only racist thing I see from your videos is making people believe hairstyles are owned by races and only certain races can have certain hairstyles.

Ana Alexa: Sounds like a premeditated plan just so that she could use bait to start an argument with you. I’m so happy you posted this. In my personal experience some non black women simply hate when our hair looks so healthy and beautiful. This was intentional. Awareness and communication is key. You’re Amazing❤❤❤❤

Briana Bailey: God forbid you get called out for making a product that works for you in a world that doesn’t cater to your hair type, as a white women im sorry you deal with like this you do as you please ❤

M O N K E: Reminds me(24 white male) of the time I bought black hair products and got called racist or something down that line by a black lady. What she didn't know is that I was buying them for my adoptive daughter, and I love trying different styles on her beautiful curly hair

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