Closure vs Frontal: Which Is Right for Your Install?
Closures give a fixed part and guard your edges; frontals let you part anywhere. A stylist verdict on which fits your install.
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Horology notes & hair care, from our specialists.
Closures give a fixed part and guard your edges; frontals let you part anywhere. A stylist verdict on which fits your install.
Double drawn hair is sorted so nearly every strand runs full length for thick, blunt ends. Single drawn keeps natural mixed lengths that taper. Compared in full here.
A dull, dry wig is almost never dead, just starved and buried under buildup. Clarify, deep-condition, detangle, reseal, and most units look new by evening.
Most full sew-ins take two to four bundles by length, density and closure or frontal. A clear chart so you avoid thin ends.
Raw hair is single-donor and unprocessed, so it lasts one to two years, takes colour and heat, and often costs less per wear than cheap wefts. Here is the case.
Most matting happens in the drawer, not on your head. Store clean, bone-dry and detangled on satin, and tangling never gets the chance to start.
HD, transparent and Swiss lace melt differently on different skin. Here is the best match for yours, plus how to tint it.
A flawless melt is prep and technique, not luck. Degrease the skin, tint the lace to your tone, cut it flush and press it flat until the hairline reads as scalp.
Straight, body-wave and raw curly beat our humidity. Match texture to your region, south or north, and stop fighting frizz.