Five steps to creating a healthy hair regimen for your curls.

Sample Hair Regimen:

Daily:
• Moisturize w/ aloe vera + water.
• Seal w/ coconut oil.

Weekly:
• Add condition (detangling optional) with favorite conditioner.

Monthly:
• Add Cleanse & Deep Treatment/Repair.
• Use shampoo.
• Strengthen your hair with a henna treatment followed by a moisture mask of your choosing.

For those new to the natural scene as well as old time curlies who just haven’t gotten the hang of it, there’s nothing more overwhelming (and time consuming) than figuring out a healthy hair regimen! Returning or transitioning to natural hair is usually a time of education and experimentation. To avoid wasting products, money and energy, here is a starting point for creating and maintaining a healthy hair regimen.

The object of a hair regimen (in our case) is to maintain healthy, curly hair. The regimen will change depending on the qualities of your own hair (thick/thin, fine/course, curly/kinky, long/short just to name a few!) but we all need to achieve certain things with hair maintenance and hygiene.

Now, based on the qualities of your hair, the products you use for each category will accomplish these steps in different ways.

1. Cleanse

Shampoo is meant to lift the hair cuticle, break up oil and dirt, and suspend it so it can be rinsed away. The goal is to remove environmental debris, product buildup, and production of sebum—the oil our skin naturally secretes. Our straight-haired counterparts probably can’t go one day without cleansing the hair because it is very easy for oil to travel down a straight strand. But in our case, oil has a harder time traveling down a loose wave, a tight curl, or a fro that sticks up & out! This is why the more textured your hair is, the dryer it feels. Our scalps are creating oil normally—it just cannot reach our hair!

So when we use shampoo, the focus should be on our scalps, since that’s where the dirt’s at. Apply the product to your roots and scalp, scrub with the fingertips, and the lather will make its way down your hair. Don’t toussle or scrunch the hair when shampooing. That could result in tangles! When you slather shampoo all over your HAIR instead of the scalp, you can expect a rough, “squeaky clean” feeling. Use shampoos that don’t contain sodium laurel (or laureth) sulfate. These ingredients are much too harsh for hair that isn’t that dirty, and have been known to cause irritation.



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This entry was posted on Wednesday, August 18th, 2010 at 3:17 pm and is filed under Botanicals, Care Methods, Curly Hair (Type 3a), Detangling, Hairstyles, ingredients, Kinky Hair (Type 4a), Products, retexturizing. You can follow any comments to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can skip to the end and leave a comment. Pinging is currently not allowed.


17 comments for “How to Create a Healthy Hair Regimen”

  1. teachermrw Says:

    Actually, I follow these steps:

    Cleanse
    Deep treat/repair
    Detangle
    Moisturize
    Seal

    I deep treat with an intensive moisturizing conditioner three times a month, and repair with a protein reconstructor once per month.

  2. evelyn Says:

    nice! i’m still working on my moisturizing/sealing step.

    and i think coconut oil is the ticket! good stuff, that coconut oil

  3. reggiestr Says:

    where has this article been for the past 2 years! i could have saved alot time and money had i read something like this before. and i just discover coconut oil a month ago and you’re right. coconut oil is one of the best things kinky type 4 hair can use. thanks for the article!

  4. Fronomenal Says:

    My regimen is:

    Cleanse
    Detangle
    Deep treat/repair
    Moisturize
    Seal
    Stretch(via braiding)
    Style(Pinned Updo)

    I do this weekly.

  5. mslittlelala Says:

    Deep Treat
    Cleanse (poo bar or gio)
    Detangle
    Thin Conditioner
    Dry (microfiber towel)
    Leave in
    Moisturize
    Seal – Oil & Thick butter
    Braid or Twist to keep from getting knots
    Cover (with scarf)

  6. EmbracingMe Says:

    My regimen so far while transitioning has been Cleanse, Deep Treat, Detangle, Moisturize and style by twisting & rod curling using KCCC with some setting lotion on the still straight ends. The results were nice when I 1st untwisted but I got a lot of flaky stuff in my hair where the KCCC was used by the 2nd day.
    I think I am now going to try the KC Knot Today as a leave in after detangling and then sealing with coconut oil and rewetting my hair more as I twist with a combo of aloe vera juice and water.
    Any thoughts?

  7. Fronomenal Says:

    My regimen is…
    Detangle
    Cleanse
    Moisturize
    Seal
    Style

  8. olympria Says:

    Hi, I am from India and my regimen is basically the same except that the products are different (domestic). Instead of shampoo we in India use ‘Shikakai’.
    After my wash i either let my hair dry naturally (and this by flipping my hair upside down and lying on the bed that way for half an hour to 45 mins – this makes sure that i don’t get a flat top). OR I use a diffuser. And then I use an Aloe Vera hair cream. For deep conditioning once (or sometimes twice) a week, I use homemade coconut oil heated with powdered curry leaves or sometimes ‘Bhringraj’ oil from the state of Kerala (from where Ayurveda originates)

  9. Violnjazzr Says:

    HI All!
    I am settling into my regimen, and I need to know if I’m doing things in the right order:
    I detangle (when necessary)/cleanse/condition/deep condition/moisturize/seal/style.

    My old hairstylist (doesn’t necessarily specialize in natural hair or organic/natural products) told me that I should be deep conditioning first, rinsing, and then using a conditioner.

    Any thoughts?

  10. MsTextureLuv Says:

    @reggiestr… LOL! Like you I needed this since 2007 when I bc’d and then started from scratch with no idea what to do…I went to a hairstylist for twists until it grew long enough to twist myself (thanks to Miss Jessie’s Rapid Recovery Treatment which made it grow like weeds)… however as a pj, I’ve had to cut down on the purchases… which is not true, I just try to find less expensive buys like the Suave Tropical Coconut poo & condish (hate it) my current regimen has been to Condish, cowash, leave-in, EVOO and any styling gel I have around… mostly Ecostyler, twist for 3-4days, wear out 1-3days and start it all over again.

    Shampoo and deep condition @ every 2weeks…. still refining til I find what works for my 4a/4b coily hair.

  11. mamaherrera Says:

    My question is this? When do you put the style product in? Before or after sealing? I would think before sealing because the sealing/oil wont’ allow other products to get in!! alos, I love hte sample regimen, it made it easy for me to udnerstand and just knowing you can get away with aloe vera gel and coconut oil, both natural 100% is exciting for me!

  12. evelyn Says:

    yes @mamaherrera i agree with you: the styler goes on before the sealant :)

    glad to hear the article helped you out! and yes i’ve found out slowly that simply and natural is better!

  13. mamaherrera Says:

    Thanks for answering back Evelyn. Another question, eh!! Is the leave-in/detangler necessary if you’re going to also apply a moisturizer, and if so can anyone recommend a good detangler that has very few ingredients and is natural?

  14. evelyn Says:

    Hmm, i think it depends on your hair and product preference. For example, sometimes i style my hair using shea butter. that is NOT a moisturizer. So i need a leave in underneath. other times, i use a gel, which again may not have enough moisture so i use a leave in underneath. Or if i do use a moisturizer, it might be extremely thick and hard to smooth onto my hair (like the shea moisture curl enhancing smoothie) a leave in helps it go on easy and soak into my hair. My leave in of choice is Kinky Curly Knot Today. But sometimes, i find a product like Oyin Handmade’s Hair Dew that acts as a leave in and is thick enough to be a styling product as well. One product, double duty! I would never use both the knot today and the hair dew.

  15. swishtut Says:

    I have always found ‘sealants’ questionable. First, how do you know that the oil is actually sealing in moisture. Is there any scientific evidence that this is occuring. and if this true and the oil actually does seal, isn’t it also sealing out moisture. Isn’t this why everyone is so afraid of ‘cones’ because they seal out moisture. Cone’s coat your hair and make the cuticle lay down creating a smooth surface. The hair is managable and shiny. but over time because of the sealing nature of cones the hair because dry, bittle and damaged. So how is sealing hair with oil, if in fact, it seals a healthy thing to do for your hair?

  16. cait Says:

    Thank you for the article! I have a question though – normally I mix my serum/sealant (which has no silicone, so not drying) with my leave-in conditioner (I’m using A’kin leave in conditioner at the moment which I LOVE) before finger-combing it through my hair. Sometimes I add some almond oil, but I have fine wavy/frizzy hair so not too much or poor hair goes limp and bleagh… Should I wait until the leave-in conditioner has settled in before I add the serum? Also, I have been using LUSH The Strokes as my intensive conditioning treatment, but it does have parabens in it which I’m a bit worried about – your thoughts?

  17. misskurly Says:

    I have 3B hair and something i found out is that whether or not i use the sealant it doesnt really make much of a difference…so heres my regimen:
    Cleanse
    Detangle
    Moisturize
    Style
    Deep condition
    I shampoo once or twice a week and deep condition 3x a month :)