Relaxed Heads - Do You Use Honey For Hair Health?

Jobwright

Well-Known Member
Bought some RAW honey yesterday at Whole Foods. Melted about 2 tbs in a bowl sitting on top of a boil of hot water. Massaged my scalp with JBCO, jojoba oil and peppermint eo. Then applied AORM, applied honey, baggy, under dryer now.
 

divachyk

Instagram: adaybyjay
Picked up some honey tonight to DC with this weekend. I'm going on 10 weeks post, trying to stretch for however long that I'm able to go. Will see if honey helps push me over the bump.
 

sunnieb

Well-Known Member
I've discovered that adding almost equal amounts of honey and evoo is a great moisturing treatment for my hair. I have the mixture on right now. :yep:
 

sunnieb

Well-Known Member
Another lesson learned:

I used waaaay too much EVOO last night! My hair was oily and coated today. :( It wasn't too bad since I bunned it up, but not the result I was looking for.

Next time I will go back to 3 parts honey and 1 part EVOO. :yep:
 

sunnieb

Well-Known Member
Doing Honey/Evoo treatment right now.

I was getting lazy, but all the beautiful hair pics posted lately have inspired me. I'm starting to get the "grow my hair" bug again. :yep:
 

PureSilver

Well-Known Member
sunnieb loves her some honey. I've used honey in the past and i will revisit once i get my cashflow straight. Its not very easy to come by in my region.
 

sunnieb

Well-Known Member
PureSilver - yes ma'am! I love what honey does for my hair!

To get the pure, from the farm honey, I have to drive to a small Farmers Market, but it's worth it. I buy the big jar ($15) and it last me for months. :yep:
 

sunnieb

Well-Known Member
The EVOO didn't seem to be working anymore, so I'm back to doing my weekly treatments using raw honey only.

Got some honey in my hair right now! ;)
 

sunnieb

Well-Known Member
http://everydayroots.com/honey-hair-treatment

4 Honey Treatments for Dry and Damaged Hair

Hair is pretty incredible. Although technically dead when it is outside of your scalp, it can still be “healthy” or damaged. Today we put so many products into our hair, apply high levels of heat to it, just to sculpt it a certain way, achieve a certain look, without second thought about what we’re actually doing. In my opinion,*beautiful hair is healthy hair, and healthy hair is not the product of what you find on the shelves in stores, but rather in your own kitchen.


Why Honey (and the other stuff)?

If you have dry or damaged hair, honey can help. A natural humectant, honey attracts moisture. It’s also full of antioxidants and nutrients to feed hair follicles that house the live part of hair, encouraging hair growth. That being said, it also needs a medium to help spread it around, otherwise you can end up with just a sticky mess, so the recipes include other natural ingredients that help you restore dry hair to a health and luster, from the scalp up.


1. Just Honey

This recipe contains just honey and water, nothing extra added or needed!

You will need…

-1/4 cup of organic raw honey
-Fresh water

Directions

Mix ¼ cup of organic raw honey with just enough fresh water to thin it out to the point where you can spread it around your hair (add it tablespoon by tablespoon.) Obviously this depends on how much hair you have-you can up the amount of honey if you need to. When you’re ready, apply as you would shampoo to damp hair and let it sit for 30 minutes. Rinse with warm water.

2. Honey and Apple Cider Vinegar

Apple cider vinegar is added here as it leaves hair with lovely shine and acts a natural conditioner.

You will need…

-1/4 cup of organic raw honey
-10 tablespoons of apple cider vinegar

Directions

Mix together honey and ACV. Apply as you would shampoo to damp hair, and let sit for 15 minutes. Rinse out with warm water.

3. Honey and Olive Oil

Olive oil can create a big difference in moisture after just a few uses, and promotes a healthy scalp and hair roots. It also helps smooth and coat dry and damaged hair shafts.

You will need…

-1/2 cup of honey
-1/4 cup of olive oil

Directions

Mix together ½ cup of honey and ¼ cup of olive oil, warming the mixture slightly if you need to. Apply to hair as needed.

4. Honey and Coconut Oil

Coconut oil, like olive oil, helps moisturize hair and hair roots. It seems to add a little bit more shine (in my opinion) and is a little lighter as well. It’s packed full of nutrients that make it an automatic go to ingredient in hair treatments.

You will need….

-1/4 cup of honey
-3 tablespoons of warmed coconut oil

Directions

Combine coconut oil and honey and blend thoroughly. Work into damp hair as you would shampoo. Let sit for 10 minutes, and then rinse with warm water.

Much of what you see in stores is just different ratios of basically the same stuff with different fragrances. With honey , you know what you’re getting every time, and personally, I love the results. I like to think of my hair as fairly healthy overall, but with the dry winter months coming up, a little extra moisture and conditioning is always wanted.


Tips

-Stick to raw organic honey. If you have to warm it a little bit that’s fine, but the ultra-pasteurized clear stuff you buy at the supermarket really doesn’t have many benefits.

-Try adding some honey to your regular shampoo or conditioner if you don’t feel like making up a separate treatment.

-Avoid harsh products and heat treatment (like straightening your hair every day.) Natural is beautiful!

-Be aware of the type of hair that you have. Applying olive oil and honey to limp, thin, hair that is prone to getting oily will probably just make it greasier and heavier.

-There’s no need to use these treatments every day. Once or twice a week should be sufficient.

-Be patient. Applying honey to damaged and dry hair is not going restore it to perfect condition right away.

By Claire Goodall
 

rawsilk

Well-Known Member
I have tried honey in various mixtures so many times and it never yields positive results. While user-error is always a possibility, I am ready to conclude that my hair just has a love affair with protein right now and doesn't want any added moisture.

Out of curiosity, how do you honey fans respond to protein - hard core, dairy, etc. (Wondering if there is a love/hate relationship with honey versus protein.)
 

rawsilk

Well-Known Member
Another question: my scalp stays dry and can drink up any oil like a sponge. Any thoughts / experiences using honey/mix on scalp?
 

divachyk

Instagram: adaybyjay
Tried honey during a cowash -- added conditioner then layered honey on top. #fail Hair didn't feel very moisturized. I'll stick to mixing it in my conditioner than applying.
 

Pennefeather

Well-Known Member
I keep forgetting that I want to try adding some honey into my conditioner. :ohwell: Thanks for the reminder. Next week, it will be ORS Mayonnaise.
 

sunnieb

Well-Known Member
I keep forgetting that I want to try adding some honey into my conditioner. :ohwell: Thanks for the reminder. Next week, it will be ORS Mayonnaise.

Let us know how you like it.

Since I've been doing weekly honey washes, my hair has definitely improved in softness and retaining moisture.

I also haven't had to use any detangling sprays throughout my 20 week relaxer stretch. I think the honey is working magic on my newgrowth as well. :yep:
 

Pennefeather

Well-Known Member
Detangling is always my downfall. If it helps me with that, then it will definitely be a keeper. I'm hoping for a four month stretch, with a possibility of transitioning to natural.
 

divachyk

Instagram: adaybyjay
I will be adding honey to every DC going forward. I use to do this back in the day...I'm returning to an oldie but goodie.
 

Ms. Tiki

Well-Known Member
I love using raw honey in my DC. I promise this makes a difference. I'm prone to dryness and this has helped up my moisture throughout my journey.
 

sunnieb

Well-Known Member
Can't sleep, so I decided to do a honey treatment! :)

I'm going to be up, so may as well let my hair benefit from it. :yep:
 
Top