Mon 15 Jun, 2009
Visualize life with no hair dryers and you will see yourself with soaking wet hair soaking your clothing or with unappealing, unkempt hair. Every home has one or more hair dryers for everyday use while the larger and hard-wearing types are usually seen in hectic salons.
Once you’ve found the magnificent device that is the pink hair dryer and managed its method, you would by no means go back to drying your hair the natural way. Who would have thought that your “standing in front of the ventilator and rubbing your mane with a towel” days will really be over?
The traditional hair dryers use metal curls to generate warm air. The major disadvantage of the older varieties is that you can’t really control the heat and sometimes it can really get searing. These metal coils are also more to spark and sometimes breaks out without warning. The newer and developed hair dryers are much more concerned about having vigorous hair than just drying or styling it. Enhanced hair dryer models include ceramic, ionic and tourmaline.
The ceramic dryers are much more effective than metal units because it spreads heat evenly nor will it get too hot. Ionic hair dryers work by shrinking the liquid droplets in a person’s mane and leave it softer and sleeker. The tourmaline units use tourmaline gems in its coil and produce twice as much negative ion than the ionic dryers.
Before buying a exact type of hair dryer, it is best to choose something lightweight yet sturdy.