Step 1
Make best friends with a wide-tooth comb. Gently work out tangles starting from the ends and working your way back to the roots. After combing, you may brush with something else if you like. Illustration is a Mason Pearson comb, handmade in Switzerland. It’s expensive, but reviewed very highly for detangling ability without hair breakage.
-
Step 2
Comb hair before shampooing. And don’t lather your hair on top of your head while shampooing. Instead, work the shampoo into your roots and squeeze it down your hair to the ends. Magazines say because shampoo is drying, you should avoid shampooing the ends, but I wash the ends anyway.
-
Step 3
Use a separate conditioner after washing. I use a separate conditioner even when using a shampoo/conditioner combo. Magazines also say to condition the ends only and avoid the roots … this I do. For children, you can get by with a single kids’ shampoo/conditioner combo.
-
Step 4
After washing, towel-dry your hair with care. Do not rub your wet head vigorously … instead wrap with a super-absorbent microfiber hair towel. Use a detangling or lightweight conditioner spray before combing wet hair. I’ve been using Sunsilk lately, but I also like Pantene, Aussie, and L’Oreal De-Tangling Spray for kids.
-
Step 5
Systematically dry your hair, meaning don’t wave the dryer around like a madwoman. And be careful when flipping your hair over to dry underneath ... sometimes I get tangles doing this myself.