More on managing thinning hair
According to some health-related sites, 40% of women experience some hair loss during menopause. I'd estimate double that percentage will notice loss in the decades that follow. If you've maintained thick, healthy hair into your 50s or beyond, are you lucky! But if you always had fine hair and are now losing some, your heart sinks when you look at your brush.
Fighting the myriad signs of aging isn't the best use of time, but we all want to look good, and hair is a very deep subject for women.
Since my initial post, I've observed hordes of women getting extensions at my new salon. My stylist says about half are mature women; the other half are 20-and-30s who want their luxuriant manes bumped up to unnaturally lush levels. I've seen so many applied that I no longer think "great hair"; I think, "$1,500 in extensions".
The problem is that extensions add volume only from mid-crown to mid-head, so if you're thinning on top or at the temples, they won't cover that. I don't have extensions, but if you do, please tell us how you like them.
I watched a soignée woman in a posh department store ladies' room casually take out a small compact that I thought was eye shadow and daub it at her hairline, near the part. She saw me staring (well, wouldn't you?) and showed me her DermMatch.
Her bob looked just fine, but she had an area at her temple where her part revealed a receding patch, about the size of a quarter. DermaMatch is scalp makeup, designed to 'paint in' the bare scalp so it blends with the hair.
She pulled back her bangs to show me the opposite, untouched temple hidden by her bangs– a dramatic difference. She said there was a little rub-off on her pillow but she'd changed to dark cases. Caveat: The product would not look realistic on large areas like a full part or thin crown.
She said if the bare spots grow, she will have a transplant, and is unwilling to take drugs like Propecia.
She said if the bare spots grow, she will have a transplant, and is unwilling to take drugs like Propecia.
She has localized hair loss; there are other approaches for overall loss of fullness. Volumizing shampoos and conditioners are multiplying as cosmetic companies respond to boomers' dismay over hair you can see through.
You can drop double digits on fancy salon stuff, but Good Housekeeping gives top marks to two Pantene products, Pantene Pro-V Full & Thick Shampoo and Conditioner, each under $6 at most drugstores. These expanded strand diameter up to 9% and got top marks from consumers for making hair look thicker.
Dry shampoo applied at the roots to add lift from the scalp is another stylist's weapon. I like Klorane Gentle Dry Shampoo, also great for travel.
Another strategy is an optical trick: place some highlights or lowlights near the face to provide contrast, which reads like thickness. But, stylists counsel, don't carry those lights throughout the head, because if they dry out the strands, you can get breakage of that now-finer hair.
Comments
We do what we can.
I hadn't considered using anything...good to know there are products on the market if things get really patchy.
I did notice Helen's pearls!
One care tip that seems to really help the drying/fragile ends: a weak vinegar rinse in the shower about once a week. My hair is noticeably shinier and softer when I do this - and not weighted down like it can be. Once my grey mellows into a color instead of dramatic streaks I will back off the coloring, as I do notice the effect on the "bounce."
pseu: Colour adds volume to my hair, too. it looks its thickest just after a visit.
LPC: Denial is fine, otherwise just too much to fret over. Many women wear their long hair up as a solution.
spacegeek33:
Thanks very much for the product tips; yes, there are worse things. (And I wonder why no one commenting has gone the extension route.)
Anonymous @ 10:51: Spacegeek likes Rogaine and I hope it works for you.
I don't do injections; my vanity work is tooth-bleaching occasionally due to a love of coffee and red wine.
hostess: That front part is similar to male pattern baldness but so different for women.
HB: I used to use the vinegar rinse in high school to bring out highlights- so cheap and it works! Yes, oily hair looks thinner, but overcleaning can strip oils. (Remember when hair was clean only if it squeaked?)
Silver Bunny: Do they have the same fondness for extensions? Here, I see some incredible manes but much of it is done with someone else's hair applied into those little doll strands.
C.
Jill Ann: My stylist told me I could not get extensions even if I wanted them b/c they are not available for curly hair (except those novelty synthetic ones.) Since my aunt and mother's hair thinned, and I have the same, I expect mine will, too.
I've dyed my hair (professionally) for maybe 22 years, and it is in extremely good condition. Over-processing is hard on hair, so it depends on what one is doing.
Anon@ 2:05:' Emu oil! Please let us know how you find it.
C. Reversing a part does work for awhile.
Anon@ 11:49: I really like how women are claiming their grey as beautiful. (One of my friends says, "It's not grey, it's *silver*.) But grey is not immune to thinning.
I started henna when I had very little white. As the white patches increase, I've found I can keep the same rich shade of auburn-brown by adjusting the indigo content.
See more at
http://www.redken.com/products/intra-force/at-home-treatments/micro-boost