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Sunset
Hair Elements
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What is the hair?
NEXT> Everyone's hair is unique but has many common characteristics. Each hair on your scalp grows from a hair follicle, a tiny, saclike hole in your skin. At the bottom of each follicle is a cluster of special cells that reproduce to make new hair cells. The new cells (made of keratin protein) that are produced are added on at the root of the hair, causing the hair to grow longer. Why Sunset Hair Elements?
The living tissue that makes
your hair grow is hidden inside the hair follicle. The shaft, the part of
a hair that you see, is made of cells that aren't living anymore. That's
important to know when you are messing with coloring or perming or
straightening your hair. If you cut yourself, your skin can heal, since
it's living tissue. If you damage your hair, it can't heal. You just have
to do what little you can to repair the damage or cut the damaged hair off
and wait for more hair to grow back. Each hair shaft is made up of two or three layers: the cuticle, the cortex, and sometimes the medulla. The cuticle is the outermost layer. Made of flattened cells that overlap like the tiles on a terra-cotta roof, the cuticle protects the inside of the hair shaft from damage. To feel the cuticle, just
pinch a single long hair between your fingers starting up near the root.
Pull the hair between your fingers and feel how slick and smooth it is. As
you move from root to tip, you're running your fingers in the same
direction as the cuticle layers. Now start at the tip of the hair. In this
direction, the hair may feel rougher; it may squeak as it passes between
your fingers. You're running your fingers against the grain, and you're
bumping into the edges of all those flattened cuticle cells. It's handy to know how different conditions affect this protective layer on the outside of each hair. Chemists talk about solutions that are acidic (like vinegar or lemon juice) and ones that are alkaline (like a mixture of water and baking soda). In an acid solution, the cuticle cells shrink and harden. In an alkaline solution, the cuticle cells swell up and soften. Just to confirm the response of the cuticle to acidic and alkaline solutions, I tried soaking one strand of hair in water and lemon juice and another in water and baking soda. I rinsed both strands carefully. When they dried, the hair from the lemon juice bath felt smoother and looked shinier. (Another triumph for scientific understanding.)
When you get split ends, you're seeing the cortex at its worst. You've worn away the protective cuticle on the tips of your hairs with harsh treatment like hard brushing or too much sun and water. Without the cuticle, the fibers of the cortex fray like the strands of a rope. Since the cortex can't heal itself, the only way to get rid of split ends is to cut them off. In the center of some hairs is the medulla, a soft, spongy mass of tissue. Coarse hair generally has this layer, while fine hair usually doesn't. The presence or absence of a medulla doesn't have much to do with how your hair behaves when you wash or color or curl it, however, so you don't have to worry about it. To fill the gaps between the
protective cuticle cells and to keep your hair shiny and flexible, glands
adjacent to the hair follicle produce a kind of natural hair conditioner
called sebum. Unfortunately, that sebum, which is an oil, also makes dirt
stick to your hair. When you shampoo your hair, you wash away this
protective oil and the dirt that clings to it. |
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®2000 Sunset Hair Elements
1223 Elm Spring Drive
Collierville, TN 38017
888-849-8686