As if hairspray, mousse and gel
are not enough products to make you pull your hair out in confusion, you
can add hair wax and hair paste to the mix. Both hair wax and paste add
texture and hold to your hair, leaving you with hair that stays in
place without the harsh look of a welded helmet. While hair wax and
paste share some similarities, they also have notable differences.
Hold
Hair
wax and hair paste generally differ in the type of hold they have on
your hair. Both will keep a style in place, but hair wax usually keeps a
single style in place all day long. Hair paste often offers more
versatility, letting you paste up one style in the morning and rework
your hair into another style by mid-afternoon or whenever you have the
urge without adding more paste. Both also offer varying degrees of
holding power, from firm to barely there.
Waxes are available as a cream, solid,
gel or spray. Creams and solids usually come in squat containers, gels
in a tube or squeeze bottle and the sprays in aerosol or non-aerosol
mists. Pastes come in creams, most often in stout containers, with
different goals in mind. Some formulas are meant for molding, some
texturize and others control. Waxes and pastes work for both men and
women, with hair texture and thickness, rather than gender, more of a
gauge on what works best.
Effects
Slicked-back
looks, or those with defined pieces of hair separated from the rest,
work with wax cream. Wax sprays keep loose strands softly in place.
Messy, bed-head looks are yours with solid wax, gel wax and texturizing
pastes. Mold hair into a style with paste designed to mold or control,
with the latter also adding texture the former best for sculpted styles.
Hair Types
All
waxes and pastes work well on thick and medium-textured hair but some
are too heavy for fine tresses. Cream wax, spray wax and texturizing
pastes will weigh down fine hair and are best for coarser hair. Gel wax
works best on hair that is a bit thinner or layered. Any hair type is
usually game for solid wax and pastes meant to mold and control.
Use
A
little goes a long way when it comes to both hair wax and paste. Start
with a dab and add more as needed. Too much weighs hair down. Both also
work on hair that is still slightly wet or hair that is already dry.
Some of the products, like the pastes and solid wax, work best if you
first warm them up a bit by rubbing them between your palms.
Considerations
With
repeated use, both products tend to leave residue and buildup on hair,
Style Hair Magazine warns. Keep buildup with a clarifying
shampoo, like Japanese shampoo which clarifies and dissolves such buildup. Hair with buildup
is often drab, dull, limp and does not respond well to any styling
products. Regular use of texturizing hair paste also has a beneficial
result, as it eventually softens coarse, unruly hair.
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