Friday, June 27, 2025

How To Flat Iron the Healthy Way

 

 
Here are a few quick tips on how to properly flat iron your hair so that you do not create more damage for you hair.

Tuesday, June 24, 2025

Biotin 101: What Is It

Keeping hair healthy is a top priority for many people, and knowing what to use or put in your body to promote healthy hair can go a long way.  Learn how biotin is good for hair, what hair care products like shampoos do to promote biotin, and a few of our favorite biotin-rich products that can help keep all kinds of hair, including color-treated hair, looking radiant.  

What is Biotin?

Biotin, also called vitamin B7, promotes healthy hair growth and prevents hair loss. It can be found in many foods you can consume but is also often found in hair care products. Biotin promotes the body’s keratin production. 

Many benefits of biotin include:  

  • Improve nail strength and health 
  • Maintains the mucous membranes of the skin, meaning your skin will look and be healthier 
  • Plays a role in blood sugar regulation  
  • Prevents birth defects and maintains health of pregnant people 

Is Biotin Good for Hair?

Yes, biotin plays an important role in keeping hair healthy by increasing the rate of follicle growth along with keratin production which impacts hair, skin, and nails. Biotin is found in many foods such as:  

  • Walnuts and peanuts
  • Milk 
  • Egg yolks 
  • Salmon, pork, and sardines

Along with consuming foods that have small amounts of biotin, using a biotin hair care product like biotin shampoo can help minimize shedding that contributes to hair loss and thinning. 

How Biotin Shampoos Work

Shampoos infused with biotin are believed to improve scalp circulation, increase hair density, and strength hair follicles. Using biotin shampoos can help hair feel more nourished and thicker. If you have thin hair, biotin can aid in making it thicker and fuller. Source

Saturday, June 21, 2025

Why Hair Turns Green In The Pool And 9 Ways To Fix It!

All you blondes out there are probably dealing with similar struggles this summer. If your hair turns green after taking a splash in the pool, you’re certainly not alone. Green hair can be an irritating setback during a season expected to be fun and free, so we are here to explain the mystery and solve the problem!

At some point in time, you’ve probably heard that blonde hair turns green after a swim-session because of the chlorine in pool water. You most likely believed chlorine to be the culprit from that point on. You’re not completely wrong, but the truth is, copper is actually the main factor at fault. Copper is a metal found in water. Even tap water with a high copper content can give your hair a green tint! However, the green color is more likely to show up after swimming in the pool because pool water contains chlorine. Chlorine and copper bond together to form a film that sticks to the proteins in each strand of hair, causing the hair to turn green.

How to Prevent and/or Fix Green Hair;

We know this is an annoyance, even while knowing it isn’t permanent. Whether you’re hoping to prevent green hair before it appears or trying to wash the green out of your hair after a swim, here are a few solutions to test.

1.) Leave-in conditioner – If you apply a leave-in conditioner before swimming, the pool water won’t stick to your hair as easily.

2.) Wet hair – Don’t get in the pool with dry hair. If you start with wet hair, chlorine and copper won’t hang onto your hair as tightly.

3.) Always, always, always wash your hair as soon as you are done swimming for the day.

4.) V8/Tomato Juice – Coat your hair with tomato juice or V8 and let it sit for 5-10 minutes. Wash and condition as normal when you are finished.

5.) Ketchup – Coat your hair in ketchup. Either wrap it in up tinfoil or put on a swim cap and let it sit for about 30 minutes before shampooing and conditioning.

6.) Aspirin – Crush 6-8 aspirin tablets inside a bowl, add warm water to it, and let it dissolve. Put the aspirin-water mixture into your hair and let it sit for about 15-20 minutes. Rinse it out with clean water, then shampoo and condition normally.Illustration of One Lemon Cut in Half with Juice Dripping

7.) Baking soda – Use ¼ – ½ a cup of baking soda and mix water with it in order to make a paste. Massage the paste into green hair and rinse it out with clean water, then wash and condition normally. The amount of times this needs to be done will depend on the intensity of the green color.

8.) Lemon juice – Saturate your hair with lemon juice and let it sit for 5-10 minutes before shampooing and conditioning as normal.

9.) Lemon Kool-Aid – Mix the Kool-Aid with water and apply it to the green areas in the hair and let it sit for several minutes. Shampoo and condition normally.

Try these tricks on yourself or your kids. You’ll finally be able to enjoy a pool day without having to worry about losing those gorgeous golden locks! Good luck! Source

Wednesday, June 18, 2025

Sunday, June 15, 2025

Happy Fathers Day!

 

Wishing every dad in all the forms a very Happy Fathers Day from us at Jon Edwards Salon & Spa!

(707) 449-4988
jonedwardssalonandspa@gmail.com


Thursday, June 12, 2025

The Benefits of Using a Heat Protectant

Heated styling tools have become a big part of modern-day life. Whether you blow dry your hair every couple of days or you can’t live without your curling wand, it’s so easy to become dependent on the professional finish that heated styling tools provide.

What is a Heat Protectant?

A heat protectant is a product that’s applied to the hair before any sort of heated styling tool is used. As you can tell from the name, its purpose is to protect against heat damage, although many heat protectants offer up additional benefits too. 

The Benefits of Using a Heat Protectant;

Of course, the main benefit that comes from using a heat protectant is preventing heat damage. By forming a barrier between your hair and the source of heat, a heat protectant cuts back on the level of direct heat that hits your strands. This benefits the hair in a few different ways:

Prevents Moisture Loss

Using heated styling tools increases the amount of moisture that your hair loses each day. However, coating your hair with a heat protectant first reduces this to a huge degree. Thanks to the extra layer created by the heat protectant, moisture won’t be able to evaporate away quite so quickly. In addition to improving moisture retention, many heat protectants are also infused with hydrating and moisturizing ingredients. These give the strands a moisture boost, leaving them looking silkier and glossier.

Leaves Hair Looking Smoother and Frizz-Free

Your hair cuticles lie on the outer layer of your hair. Each one overlaps, almost like shingles on a roof, giving your hair a smooth finish. However, heat damage causes these cuticles to crack, leaving the hair looking rough and frizzy. A heat protectant smooths over already-cracked cuticles to give them a sleeker appearance once again. It also helps to block heat from further damaging cuticles, therefore preventing your hair from looking even frizzier.

Makes Hair Feel More Manageable

If you’ve ever wished that your hair felt easier to manage and style, then a heat protectant is definitely worth trying. Thanks to how these products coat each strand of hair, they leave the hair feeling much more elastic, and therefore easier to work with. 

Helps to Preserve Hair Color

As we mentioned earlier, heat slowly strips away dyes. If you want your hair color to last for as long as possible, then using a heat protectant is a must. It will prevent the heat from coming into direct contact with your strands, and therefore the dye that coats them, which will help to preserve your color.

A little advanced planning is best when using a heat protectant. While you can go ahead and apply one to dry hair, they often work better when applied to wet locks. Wet or damp hair is much more efficient at absorbing hair care products, enabling your heat protectant to work on a deeper level, rather than simply on the surface. If you’ve decided to do some last-minute heat styling on dry hair that hasn’t had a heat protectant applied, then it’s still worth applying one now. However, you’ll need to wait for your hair to dry once again before you start heat styling – moisture in the hair doesn’t react well when heat is applied! Source

Friday, June 6, 2025

How to use Hair Chalk

 

 
Here is a quick tutorial on how and where to apply hair chalk. Hair chalk is making a comeback in the younger generation. Its the perfect way to add temp color pops to your hair! 

Tuesday, June 3, 2025

Dandruff vs Dry Scalp

Experiencing flakiness and itchiness? These symptoms may point to either dry scalp or dandruff, as the two often look similar. However, their causes are quite different: dry scalp results from lack of moisture, while dandruff is usually triggered by excess oil and an overgrowth of yeast on the scalp.

A dry scalp occurs when the skin on the scalp doesn’t produce enough natural oil. This can lead to itching, flaking, irritation, and is often accompanied by small, dry flakes and dry hair.

If you have dry skin, you’re more likely to experience a dry scalp as well. Common causes include:

  • Dry air
  • Excessive hair washing
  • Underlying skin conditions, such as eczema

Research shows that dandruff’s main cause is seborrheic dermatitis. This condition turns your skin oily, red, and scaly, and is often triggered by an overgrowth of Malassezia yeast, meaning there is a close relationship between the presence of certain scalp fungi and dandruff.

One way to distinguish between dry scalp and dandruff is by the flakes: dry scalp flakes tend to be small, dry, white, and powdery, while dandruff flakes are usually larger, greasy, and sometimes yellowish in color.

In general, flakes are more likely to be caused by dandruff if:

  • The scalp feels oily
  • There is persistent itching, even without a feeling of dryness
  • The hair appears greasy or unwashed

Causes of Dry Scalp vs Dandruff
When your scalp has too little moisture, the skin can become dry, irritated, and begin to flake off.

A dry scalp can be triggered by:
  • cold, dry air
  • hot water
  • eczema
  • age
  • psoriasis
The main cause of dandruff is seborrheic dermatitis, and this can be due to:
  • age
  • hormonal changes
  • stress
  • underlying medical conditions
  • improper hair care routine
It's important to treat your scalp based on whether you're experiencing dry scalp or dandruff, as the causes and the remedies are different.

For Dry Scalp:
  • Use a gentle, moisturizing shampoo and hydrate the scalp with natural ingredients like aloe vera or coconut oil.
  • Gently massage the scalp when washing your hair to help loosen flakes without causing further irritation.
  • Avoid long, hot showers, which can strip the skin of moisture and worsen dryness and itching.
  • Reduce the frequency of hair washing to preserve the scalp’s natural oils.
  • Protect your scalp from cold, dry weather, which can contribute to dryness and flaking.
For Dandruff:
  • Use a medicated anti-dandruff shampoo containing active ingredients like Ketoconazole, Selenium sulfide and Pyrithione zinc. These help reduce flaking, calm inflammation, and target the yeast associated with dandruff.
  • Cleanse your scalp regularly to manage oil buildup and reduce the accumulation of dead skin cells and product residue.
  • Make some lifestyle adjustments:
  • Eat a balanced diet rich in vitamins and minerals (especially zinc and B vitamins).
  • Manage stress, which is a known trigger for dandruff flare-ups
If your dandruff does not improve with over-the-counter treatments, consult a dermatologist or healthcare provider for a personalized treatment plan. Source