Will these home made recipes from Seventeen Magazine really help my hair?

As in the question that I am a week ago (April 2010) it is a fruit compote that eliminates frizz. . . It is said. . . Potassium in bananas and melons big help soften son, lingered a few drops of olive oil to keep hair smooth. Then, the recipe is: 1) Mix 1 banana, 1 / 4 watermelon (without rind) 2 tbsp soup. The yogurt and 1 tablespoon soup. Olive oil and a type of mixer. 2) Apply the mixture washed wet hair and comb through from root to tip. 3) let it sink in 15-20 minutes, then rinse thoroughly. Shampoo and condition your hair and style as usual. This was the first recipe for hair frizz:) Do you think it would be effective? OK, and the second is probably to fix split ends, a lawyer name his mask for your hair. It is said. . . To strengthen the fragile ends and repair of damage, and even less smoothing and moisturizing honey lawyer to go to work! The recipe is as follows: 1) Mix 1 can coconut milk (it makes hair shine tons!), mashed avocado and 1 / 4 cup honey in a bowl type. 2), slather the mixture on dry hair, focusing on the distribution and damaged ends. Top with a plastic shower cap. 3) Blast your hair with the heat from your hair dryer for 5 minutes, then let the mask to take in another 30 minutes. 4) Rinse well, but no shampoo. Style as usual. And this is the end of the second recipe:) it will work? Thank you for your time!


One Response to “Will these home made recipes from Seventeen Magazine really help my hair?”

  1. Kim says:

    I’ve tried variations of these and some of the ingredients DO work. Coconut milk or coconut oil and olive oil make your hair sooooo shiney and soft. I usually just take some olive oil and run it through my hair and leave it on for a few hours (3+; you can even sleep with it if you lay a towel over your pillow and clip your hair up) as a deep conditioner (you can use the regular kind that you cook with).
    I have never tried yogurt or avocado, but I’m sure they would work (milk and avocado oil are used in a lot of good conditioners, so I bet those would make a good mask).
    I can’t see cantaloupe or banana doing anything. Honey is probably a bad idea. I’ve put stuff like that in my hair before and it wouldn’t come out! I had to wash my hair so many times that it actually ended up drier. Also, this wasn’t in your post but if you are doing at home masks, don’t use mayo! It stripped my hair!

Trackbacks/Pingbacks


Leave a Reply