luckiestdestiny
Well-Known Member
Instyle Hair magazine Spring 2013 issue pg.58
I wish I could copy it here but it's in my magazine. What do you think? Does this reflect your reality? I know in NY it may be true but when I visit my mom in KY it's the opposite. Relaxers rule.
This is not to knock relaxers. I just think it's great that women believe they have more options now and are not afraid of experimenting with the hair coming out of their heads (again not that relaxed are but there was a point where very few ppl were letting you see their hair unless it was 3c or looser).
“Natural hair is not a fad, it’s a choice,” said Audra Cooper, the owner of Naturally Divine Beauty. The popularity of natural hairstyles has spawned a crop of specialty beauty parlors throughout the region, and shifted the economic balance of the $185 million black hair-care market
http://www.dallassouthnews.org/2013/01/10/black-hair-care-market-is-a-185-million-business/
So anyways does this reflect the reality in your neighborhood.
I wish I could copy it here but it's in my magazine. What do you think? Does this reflect your reality? I know in NY it may be true but when I visit my mom in KY it's the opposite. Relaxers rule.
This is not to knock relaxers. I just think it's great that women believe they have more options now and are not afraid of experimenting with the hair coming out of their heads (again not that relaxed are but there was a point where very few ppl were letting you see their hair unless it was 3c or looser).
“Natural hair is not a fad, it’s a choice,” said Audra Cooper, the owner of Naturally Divine Beauty. The popularity of natural hairstyles has spawned a crop of specialty beauty parlors throughout the region, and shifted the economic balance of the $185 million black hair-care market
http://www.dallassouthnews.org/2013/01/10/black-hair-care-market-is-a-185-million-business/
So anyways does this reflect the reality in your neighborhood.