What is Hair Volumizing Product?
Hair volumizers are used to temporarily add volume, body, and shine to thin or flat hair. Hair volumizers are used by both men and women. Men turn to hair volumizers to make their hair look more dense. Volumizers come in many forms such as shampoos, conditioners, sprays, pomades and lotions.
Hair volumizers contain humectants, which work by attracting moisture from the surrounding areas to the hair strand, thereby swelling the hair and making it look thicker. Various polymers present in the volumizer coat the hair strand, making it look thicker and shiny.[1]
Shampoo and conditioner forms of the volumizers are used just like ordinary shampoo or conditioners. The spray and lotion form of volumizers are used on damp hair near the roots of the hair. In order to use a hair volumizer, the person using the product must flip their head downward and gradually blow dry the hair, with the air being blown along the shaft of the hair until the hair is dry. Drying the hair in this position will increase volume and achieve the desired effect.
While the hairstyling products listed above are the most commonly used, there are other types of products as well. Serums, leave-in conditioner, clays, hair tonic, hair dry powder shampoo, and heat protection sprays are frequently used hairstyling products in salons and homes across the country.
Rather than bulking the width of your hair, volumizing shampoos produce lift. Your tapered locks tend to lay flat, so fullness is attained by adding three-dimensional body and boosting your hair from the roots.
What Is The Difference Between Thickening And Volumizing Shampoo?
Thickening and volumizing — Many beauty magazines and advertisers use the terms synonymously when referencing shampoos, but are they the same?
There is a definitional difference between volumizing and thickening:
- Volume measures three-dimensional spaces; to volumize is to add fullness.
- Thick is the space between sides; to thicken is to make wider.
How do these definitions apply to your hair and, more importantly, to the shampoo you use? By and large, volumizing shampoo concerns your entire head of hair while thickening shampoo treats your hair strands.
What is the difference between thickening and volumizing shampoos? Maybe it is how each shampoo cares for your thin, fine, aging hair biology.
The Difference Between Thin Hair and Fine Hair
Your hair follicles are a tube-shaped structure in the outer layer of your scalp and determine the density of your hair strands. Your hair begins life at the bottom of your hair follicle. Your hair root is constructed of protein cells and is sustained by blood vessels nearby. Hair grows out of the skin as more cells form. Nearby sebaceous glands create sebum oil which conditions your skin and hair.
In their younger years, women have about 80,000-120,000 hairs on their heads, and they usually lose about 100 each day. As you age, less blood reaches your follicles, your glands produce less sebum, and follicles go dormant. The amount of hair you lose each day goes way up, causing:
- Thin hair — more space on the scalp between the active follicles, and more gaps between the strands themselves.
Furthermore, your still-active follicles contract producing:
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Fine hair — hair shafts with slim diameters. Each of your growth cycles produces finer hair than the one previous.
What Is Thickening Shampoo?
Thickening shampoo is meant to eliminate hair gaps by thickening hair strands. While some products include ingredients that promote hair growth, most of them work by creating the illusion of thickness by temporarily plumping up the strands.
How Thickening Shampoo Targets Your Strands
Some thickening shampoos aim to solve your thin hair woes by infusing your locks and scalp with a protein and vitamin to wick in moisture for added width. Other shampoo companies use polymer ingredients to achieve the same effect. After rinsing away the shampoo, the coat left behind makes your strands look and feel more expansive.
Thickening Shampoo Disappointments
Many women suffer disappointment in their thickening shampoo because they may be unsure of why it does not work.
The Results Are Temporary
Like all good things, they come to an end. The thickening layers only stay on until your next shower. If you continue to use these products, the polymer coatings can build up on your hair over time, exacerbating your fine hair’s flatness by packing on weight and tapering bounce.
To restore your hair to its pre-polymer glory, you will need clarifying shampoo to strip away the residue. Unfortunately, the heavy sulfates in clarifying shampoo can abrade and weaken your aging hair’s already fine structure, causing dull, lifeless hair, plagued with split-ends and breakage.
There Are Limits to Your Hair’s Thickening
A protein called keratin makes up 90% of your hair; the main ingredients in some thickening shampoos are keratin and a B-5 vitamin called panthenol. These two ingredients work in tandem to thicken your hair.
Keratin bolsters and protects your hairs' outer cuticle layer while the B-5 permeates your scalp to generate and attract moisture. Boosted moisture equals bloated strands; however, fine hair has a limit to the amount it can swell, meaning it may not work on your fine and thinning locks, leaving more exposed scalp than you would like.
What Is Volumizing Shampoo?
Rather than bulking the width of your hair, volumizing shampoos produce lift. Your tapered locks tend to lay flat, so fullness is attained by adding three-dimensional body and boosting your hair from the roots.
Volumizing Shampoo Targets Your Scalp
Volume starts at the roots, so volumizing shampoo targets your scalp, follicles, and the base of your hair shafts. Build-up and residue are minimized, providing your hair with bounce and buoyancy.
Volumizing Shampoo Advantages
Many shampoos use harsh sulfates and heavy ingredients that dry out your fine hair and inflame your scalp. Aging changes compound these complexities, leaving you with brittle, thinning hair, prone to breakage.
Volumizing shampoos incorporate ingredients to enhance follicle structure, maximize lift, and clean without leaving residue build-up. For long-term volume, choose Better Not Younger’s Wake Up Call Volumizing Shampoo, formulated for your fine hair’s changing physiology with ingredients like:
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Argan oil — Argan oil contains antioxidants, anti-inflammatories, and essential nutrients like omega-6 and vitamin E, necessary for healthy hair and skin.
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Caffeine — The energizing properties of caffeine deliver a jolt to your hair follicles, surging scalp blood flow.
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Meadowfoam seed oil — Meadowfoam seed oil hydrates your scalp and hair, adds luster, aids in moisture retention, and controls frizz.
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Biotin — This water-soluble B-vitamin reduces scalp inflammation, improves your hair’s keratin infrastructure, and thickens your mane.
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Bamboo — With 70% silica, bamboo helps toughen your tresses and shores up moisture retention, making your thin hair appear thicker.
- Sage — This natural astringent flushes out your follicles and balances scalp oil production.
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