I can't lie the title of your video made me side eye and even after reading the comments agreeing I was still skeptical but I'm now half way through your video and the the penny has dropped haha this definitely makes a lot of sense! Why would low porosity hair need to be re-moisturised throughout the week if its key characteristic is locking-in moisture once it's added, so glad I watched this!!!
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
Haha thank you!! I was skeptical myself when doing the research definitely took me a while to get my head around it all glad it helped xx
@nethaniapierre81492 жыл бұрын
Well my low porosity hair doesn't need to be re moisturized throughout the week sooo🤣🤣 I'm skeptical about this I'm not gonna lie lol.
@AuntieSenSen2 жыл бұрын
@@nethaniapierre8149 exactly. People of the diaspora have all different textures. I’m AA/Caribbean and my hair is definitely low porosity. I hardly ever moisturize my hair in between washes.
@nethaniapierre81492 жыл бұрын
@@AuntieSenSen Agreed 👍🏾💯 I'm Haitian.
@court86402 жыл бұрын
@@AuntieSenSen thats when genetics come into play. So you most definitely can be low porosity bc of your genetics.
@cutiebeautybronzer2 жыл бұрын
honestly so grateful for this video. There is just so much misinformation in the natural hair community and it drives me nuts because influencers and the hair industry are just there to exploit these insecurities for profit. I just wish black hair education was the driving force instead of making money at our expense. It really frustrates me but seeing you do this is really encouraging. Thank you. xx
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
Honestly! There needs to be more emphasis on research in development in black haircare the same way other textures have! I’m glad it was helpful and thank you for this🤍🤍🤍
@cfoster68042 жыл бұрын
Yes!
@CreativePower.2 жыл бұрын
You can always do your own research and share it with others. You don't have to wait for someone to give you information that you can get yourself.
@semoneg28262 жыл бұрын
This is the reason I follow selective people.....I might listen to a video but don't take everything as doctrine
@merondejene4222 жыл бұрын
Yea that was what I was wondering I am ethiopian and we don’t actually have the same hair texture it’s kinda softer for eg mine than most African and I was confused to say high how about that
@m.j.parker Жыл бұрын
This confirmed a lot for me! I did the water test and based off the description I thought I was low porosity. I ended up coming across a video that’s said “you may not be low porosity, you may just have product buildup & need to clarify”. When I clarified I found that my hair acted very differently! Then I began thinking I may just have medium porosity, until just this past weekend when I let my hair air dry with no product & saw just how fast it dried. This video further confirmed my assumptions! Thank you!
@naturalnadinee Жыл бұрын
Wow I’m glad to hear it! Yes it’s so crazy how quickly our hair actually dries with no product hopefully it helps xx
@blackmoongoddess12 Жыл бұрын
OMG!!!! I'm in the same boat, I also did the water test years ago and it stayed at the top so I thought I was "low porosity" but recently my hair has been extremely dry throughout the years so I went back to the basics and started back researching low/high porosity hair and BAM!!!!! I saw a video and ALL the signs represented that I have high porosity hair.. 1) Soaks up water easily 2)Dries quickly (in air dry phase) 3) Dries quickly after moisturizering 4) Get a single strand of your hair,start from end to root rubbing your fingers in-between the strand and if you feel little bulbs on the strand that's another sign of high porosity hair.
@m.j.parker Жыл бұрын
@@blackmoongoddess12 literally same!! I used to think my hair strand was smooth, but I feel the ridges now!
@sasquelle Жыл бұрын
I did the water test just now. some of the strands are on the surface, some are in the middle and some of them are below/ So I am very confused also
@blackmoongoddess12 Жыл бұрын
@@sasquelle hmm 🤔 I recently did the water test again and my hair stayed at the top AGAIN lol It could be the water....I live in Phoenix and found out that the water here is extremely hard which is very bad on my high porosity hair but when I lived down south my hair would stay moisturized for days because the water is much softer😭 I hope that helps hon!
@vegahimsa Жыл бұрын
I’m slightly confused by this conclusion that’s been drawn. Maybe we should say that “low-porosity” looks different with different hair textures. Because my boyfriend most DEFINITELY does not have high-porosity hair. He’s prone to build-up, heavy oils, creams and butters make his hair dry, gunky and un-refine his curl pattern. These are all unquestionable hallmarks of low-porosity hair. His hair texture is coarse so it can handle some heavish products but it becomes build-up extremely easily. Coarse low-porosity 4b-c hair is different than say my 2c fine low porosity hair. But it doesn’t mean that his hair isn’t low-porosity. The actual texture of the hair strand matters just as much as porosity. Porosity looks different for different hair textures. If you need heat to get your hair to absorb product…it means it’s low-porosity. If your cuticles were open it wouldn’t require heat to lift the cuticles. It’s also a misconception that low-porosity hair isn’t dry. Low porosity hair can be just as dry as high-porosity hair. Low porosity hair holds onto water easier BUT it struggles to absorb water from the environment. High porosity hair loses water easier but it also absorbs water much easier. If you’re not properly moisturizing low-porosity hair with humectants it’ll feel dry very quickly. All hair requires moisture the same. High porosity hair can feel soft and moist. Low porosity hair can feel coarse and dry. It’s all about HOW you’re caring for it. And texture & porosity are the metrics you use to determine the best way to care for it
@serenity2010sh Жыл бұрын
Yes! This makes way more sense then the video. She states some facts but contradicts herself sometime. It kinda makes me mad because she's trying to debunk low porosity hair when some people really have it and she can confuse people who do with misinformation.
@TreyBtw Жыл бұрын
yea, it doesn’t matter how clean my hair is. it takes forever to dry and it’s really good at holding moisture. when i overdo with products my hair is worse off vs when i treat like it’s low porosity
@TreyBtw Жыл бұрын
and kinda like you’re saying it’s not 1 size fits all. our porosity might not be as low but even on the black hair examples they don’t all look as raised as that last example on the far right
@blueismylove3128 Жыл бұрын
@@TreyBtwExactly. I'm confused why the conclusion is "black people can't have low porosity" vs "black people have more variety in porosity". Some of the pictures she shows are literally low porosity.
@ivyfeenix Жыл бұрын
Agreed
@caprisrecipesaves681911 ай бұрын
Finally! Thank you, all the misinformation spreading via KZbin and social media is frightening and sad. Always knew I had high porosity very fine hair but the natural hair community would say I’m low porosity.
@naturalnadinee11 ай бұрын
Thank you girl! Glad it helped xxx
@AngelfaceTV2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this because i was so confused. Every thing i read made it sound like i had low porosity hair (the test) but i actually saw my own hair under a microscope in highschool science class, and i saw my hair follicle looked like a high porosity follicle next to a white persons hair which looked like low porosity. This provided a lot of clarity
@ludivineametepe8491 Жыл бұрын
I've been spending a lot of time trying to understand this whole porosity thing, and I've just come across your video... your are the first person talking about porosity with some evidence. Thanks a lot !
@naturalnadinee Жыл бұрын
You’re welcome x
@Bahamamos11 ай бұрын
Keep people delusional, they'll get confused. Keep people informed, they'll think you're a hater. Let them learn their lesson, they'll learn from what you already said and genuinely claim they didn't learn from you.
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
ITS OFFICIAL! I’ll be filming a part 2.0 of this video with a deep dive into the research papers I used to get here! A lot of you have been asking and skeptical about this video, my next video will clarify absolutely ALL of your questions! Stay tuned loves 🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
Part 2 of this video is out now. More in depth analysis into the sources it’s abit heavy on the science than this one so there’s that! Thank you all for the loveeee 🤍 BLACK PEOPLE CANT HAVE LOW POROSITY HAIR Pt.2! | The science behind african hair cuticles kzbin.info/www/bejne/bYuWo3aLbpylh80
@bridgetswanmv56472 жыл бұрын
This information makes so much sense. I know some may disagree but if you feel your hair is very low porosity then treat it as such. It’s like when I told my doctor that chocolate breaks out my skin. He said there is no science base on chocolate causing acne. However, if you break out after eating chocolate, don’t eat it.
@bperez8656 Жыл бұрын
I’m Puerto Rican and I knew this intuitively. You NAILED IT!!!!!
@brianabreeahna54112 жыл бұрын
I have been Natural since 2008 and I have always used youtube to decide how to care for my hair. I remember when the porosity theory was introduced there was A LOT OF PUSHBACK. Women were saying the same thing Nadine is say but in a less scientific way. It just didn't make sense but somehow or community became convinced. Makes you wonder about programming, marketing etc. Anyway great video !
@CocoaCookies_11 ай бұрын
This was very informative. Thank you. I noticed a lot of people are pretty defensive in the comments. I have a theory about why that may be the case. Good hair vs bad hair is a deep issue in the black community. Bad hair is supposedly very tightly coiled, dry, short, and don’t be dark skin with all those characteristics too. Good hair is supposedly silky, loose curls, long, and often attributed to one’s blackness being diluted in some way. We’ve continued to add criteria to each side, and porosity is just one of the newer criteria to use to place our hair into categories of good or bad instead of just appreciating it for what it is. I think the people that are defensive about possibly/likely having high porosity hair have some internalized bias or colorism/texturism to work through. High porosity hair is often improperly associated with damaged, bad hair. Not many people know you can actually be born with high porosity hair. And it doesn’t necessarily mean it’s damaged.
@naturalnadinee11 ай бұрын
Omg so well said!! I high porosity doesn’t mean damaged by any means it just means it’s high porosity our hair is going to flourish regardless xxx
@blue-ck9ns6 ай бұрын
You’re exactly right. This is what I was trying to explain to my sister. My hair is coily when soaking wet, but as soon as I squeeze the water out, the curls start to frizz and about an hour later if I don’t put gel in it, it turns into a giant frizz ball or “Afro”. The reason our hair is so dry is because it’s high porosity, hydration is what brings out our coils and curls, but our hair doesn’t hold onto the water, leaving it dry and frizzy. The reason why European hair appears to dry quicker and absorb water easier is because it’s so thin, they barely have any hair compared to us. But their hair holds onto hydration much better because most of them have low porosity. Asian hair is similar, but their hair is much thicker of course.
@blue-ck9ns6 ай бұрын
I’ll also state that one thing that can temporarily change the porosity of your hair is the products that you’re using and specifically the ingredients in those products. For example, If you have gel in your hair, it makes your hair hold onto hydration longer, so your hair will take a longer time to dry. This does not mean you have low porosity hair.
@naturalnadinee6 ай бұрын
Literally this! my hair would take 2 days to air dry if i put thick products and gel in - I used to think i was very low porosity until i realised the same with no product our hair does not hold onto water at all! which is partially why we need the products in the first place!xxx
@JazmineeNoel2 жыл бұрын
Was literally searching for products to use on low porosity and hair and came across this video because it caught my eye. And honestly the things you are pointing out make a lot of sense. I look forward to watching part 2 of this for more information.
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed the video hun and hope it helps in your natural hair journey!🤍🤍
@mistysuzumiya Жыл бұрын
Wow..for my whole natural hair journey, I thought I was low porosity due to the strand test and the idea that low porosity = dry hair. But I recently came across a tiktok of someone explaining high porosity and felt like those were more of the characteristics of my hair. I had to revisit this whole porosity thing and came across your video which confirmed my suspicion and all this false information going around in the hair community. Really hope that now understanding that my hair is high porosity, I can properly take care of my hair
@graced_by_ebeauty2 жыл бұрын
As a natural hairstylist, I don't agree. I have clients that have different hair porosity. As black people we have different hair textures, it's not a one size fit all. Because of our kinks, curls and coils the natural oils our scalp produces do not travel down the shaft of our hair strands and that results in our hair being dry. The straighter your hair is, the easier it is to maintain. When I get I silk press I don't need to moisture my hair as often because my natural oils do that for me and my hair stays soft without using much of anything.The minute I do too much, my hair reverts. When my hair is not straight I have to use products to retain moisture as the oils only travel but so far. There are also different things that can change your hair porosity like lightening and coloring your hair. The best thing to do is to learn what your hair likes and stick to a simple hair routine with little to no manipulation, but that's just my opinion.
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
Yes it’s definitely a spectrum, there is no one size fits all necessarily. but there’s a difference between greasy and moisturised the sebum we produce coats the hair strand for protection it’s not a moisturiser. Straight hair plays a big role in sebum retention but a black person with straight hair can go weeks without washing yet a Caucasian/Asian with straight hair can only last a few days max. before it getting extremely greasy. The difference here is the smoothness of the surface of the hair, same with relaxed hair the texture is straight yet it is very dry (relaxers increase porosity even more) so I agree texture plays a huge role but not as much as we think& also silk pressed hair is very dry, just because it feels on the surface nourished doesn’t mean it’s not dry, that’s why our hair naturally wants to revert back by sucking moisture from the atmosphere/products & yes simple routine is KEY!👑
@semoneg28262 жыл бұрын
So true our hair behave differently because black pot hair are so diverse....I love the diversity.....however what works for you may not work for me
@happycamper91up712 жыл бұрын
What you're describing is a diverse spectrum of very porous hair👀
@rashaetate3102 жыл бұрын
Same. I’ve been licensed for 13 years and this isn’t factual. Products don’t know what color you are. Not all bald people have kinky hair and not all white peoples have straight hair. All porosity means is the ability for moisture to absorbed.
@IndiaSimoneD2 жыл бұрын
Wow hair stylist with a license from a few months in a hair styling program want accept scientific facts from a scientist lol be careful who you let in your hair. 🤦🏽♀️
@bnellaniyah Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video. What you're saying makes perfect sense. I think the reason you are getting so much pushback is that BW have been saturated with this concept of high/low porosity as a result of social media. On the surface, it made sense because our hair can be so different. No matter what I do to my daughter's hair it looks dry the day after wash day. However, my hair retains moisture longer but will dry out quickly if I wear it in a twist out or wash and go. In comparison, most Asians and Caucasians don't add moisture because they don't need it as it weighs their hair down. So basically, we need to approach our hair care in a totally different way. Problem is where do we start, as many of us are already confused as to the best method to care for our hair. With your background and knowledge, you should consider developing a new system...🙃
@naturalnadinee Жыл бұрын
Oh absolutely! I think we really want answers in regards to our hair and we’re willing to a lot into a box that didn’t make all the way sense… I’m glad you enjoyed the video 🤍🤍🤍
@sapapril1980 Жыл бұрын
We honestly need more people like you: educated black female scientists who are not out to con the black natural hair community! This is amazing info! I kept testing my hair and sometimes it would sink and sometimes it would swim and I was honestly about to lose my mind… Omg. I knew something wasn’t right.
@naturalnadinee Жыл бұрын
Wow thank you so much 🥺🤍 glad it helped somebodyyyy
@divestedkonservativekarame4269 Жыл бұрын
@@naturalnadineemy hair stays swimming.
@naturalnadinee Жыл бұрын
@@divestedkonservativekarame4269 sponges also float in water but are great at absorbing it because something floating in water has nothing to do with its porosity but it’s density xx
@cheryls.booker333610 ай бұрын
As a nurse, I believe in scientific research. You have enlightened me to do even more research. Thank you for sharing. ♥️
@harmoneypeters Жыл бұрын
I actually accept this I receive this information it all makes sense!! I think there is a spectrum in each category however we are in that category
@jaznchic2 жыл бұрын
This makes a lot of sense. I appreciate you taking the time to break this down for us. If you ever develop your own product line, I will certainly without a doubt purchase from you because there is literally a science behind everything with our bodies, hair, skin, nails, etc. I plan to look into ways to balance the PH in my hair/scalp. I really appreciate you for this. Thank you again for sharing! 💕
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
Thank you!! We definitely deserve more science & research based haircare!xx
@UsonePrecious2 жыл бұрын
This is the video natural hair KZbin has needed for years.
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
It may be too late I fear!😭😭
@internetfactcheck Жыл бұрын
This channel is a goldmine...I am surprised it hasn't blown up yet! I recently learned about water damage and how your hair shouldn't be wet for more than an hour--so I learned this whole drying process of how you should hold your blow dryer 9 cm away from your head and only blow dry your hair for 1 minute at a time and give it 1 minute to rest and repeat, but the whole time I was thinking about this I noticed it was a study done in Korea and given how different Korean and Black hair is I was wondering you if you had any insight on water damage and air-drying vs. blow drying. I found out what it's called: "hygral fatigue" I think.
@naturalnadinee Жыл бұрын
Hey hun & thank you so much! And I mentioned this in another video I will always blow dry, not only does wet hair give hygral fatigue, wet hair is also weak and prone to damage, drying your hair as quickly as possible is always best in my opinion and research does back this up. If people fear heat damage or excessive dryness from blow drying then they can always use lower heat xxx
@internetfactcheck Жыл бұрын
Okay great thanks for the response. I am currently binging your videos so I am sure I will see this one soon!@@naturalnadinee
@ChristinaCurry852 жыл бұрын
Very interesting video. I was glued from beginning to end lol. I love how you used scientific research to back up your views on porosity. Makes me rethink my whole hair care routine. Thank for this valuable information.
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
Thank you! I’m so glad it made sense cause I never know if I just sound like im talking jibberish!🤣
@hairsolutionschile72962 жыл бұрын
@@naturalnadinee you were perfect 🤌🏻 thank you so much. New subscriber 💯
@willdajarrett1107 Жыл бұрын
Excellent information! The more I watch these videos, the more I am inclined to listen largely to the scientific experts, like yourself!
@Nicole-wemadeit4 ай бұрын
I love that you have a science background! Thank you for breaking this down so well!
@patiencejacobs8092 жыл бұрын
I am a Chemical Engineer, and sincerely this is the best I have ever heard about our African hair. Now this makes sense., keep up the good work sis.
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
Omg Yass love that! Thank you so much!🤍🤍
@semoneg28262 жыл бұрын
The thing is African hair is very diverse because of mix genes what works for you may not work for me. We have Afro kinky Africans to curly African hair type
@joaquinauzenne5 ай бұрын
Really appreciated your lucid scientific perspective on taking care of your hair backed by research on our hair's chemistry. Keep up the good work :-)
@yolieyoliyo2 жыл бұрын
Well damn. This is so informative and makes so much sense! I have been spinning with the low, normal, high porosity stuff. Thank you for taking the time to present the information.
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
Thank you! Sometimes I feel like I raced ahead and didn’t explain properly! Thank you🤍🤍
@patriciaallen62412 жыл бұрын
WOW, shocking information, but as a new natural it makes so much sense, I have to moisturize my hair every other day or sometimes every day and I am here thinking something is wrong with my hair why its not retaining moisture for even 2-3 days ....wow wow. this information is really food for thought. thank you. I'm about to watch Part 2
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
Wow really glad you enjoyed and found it helpful hopefully it can help you navigate your hair journey!🤍🤍🤍
@serenity2010sh Жыл бұрын
You are definitely low porosity. I was high porosity when I had a perm my hair will drink up product but now that I'm natural it won't absorb unless I use warm water to open up the hair shaft.
@blue-ck9ns6 ай бұрын
You need to use a gel. Gel makes our hair hold onto water longer.
@lisamagby4359 Жыл бұрын
This makes so much sense! Thank you so much for sharing this. I just found your page and have already learned a lot!
@harmoneypeters Жыл бұрын
Now I know why my Asian (non Indian) hair extensions last the longest ! There hair is invincible!
@lilambe10 ай бұрын
Interesting perspective, I consider myself low porosity and I never moisturize mid week 😅 unless ofc it is damaged and has become high porosity. If my hair is dry it needs to be washed and hasn’t been washed in 1-2 weeks. ATP it’s dehydrated 😂 My hair won’t absorb anything unless warm water is added anyhow😅 cold water makes my hair instantly feel like straw & tangle & it won’t absorb and product goin forward, it will just sit on top. When I rub an individual strand up vs down there is little to no difference in feel on most strands smooth both ways. Compared to when my hair was damaged there was a significant difference (rubbing upward felt significantly rougher) and that’s how I knew it was high porosity b/c of the damage. My hair is protein sensitive whereas people who have high porosity require it more often. Black people are very diverse. For reference I have majorly 4a dense but fine hair. Crown is 4c & very coarse. Back is 3c. If i treated my hair like high porosity my hair would instantly turn to straw & break off 😆 something tells me their database have very few samples of not only natural but healthy black hair. These the same people that only recently added type 4 to the curl typing chart 😆 My hair has luster despite my naturally dusty brown hair color. Especially when blown out/ straightened with no oil/ serum needed. I wouldn’t go so far as to say my hair is as low in porosity as an Asians. Fact of the matter is porosity is a spectrum & based on how it feels and behaves my hair is most certainly on the lower end of the spectrum, just not the lowest 🤷🏾♀️ I will say I find low porosity to be rare in our community, most people just have product buildup like you said 😂 even in my family, I’m the only 1 with low porosity & look at me crazy when I tell them I can’t use cold water or only moisturize every 1-2 weeks. Also in the summer as a FL resident I wash more often, absolutely once a week b/c the sun WILL cook all the moisture out 😂
@healthhugger2 жыл бұрын
Finally this makes sense! I watched so many videos and read so many articles on porosity trying to figure it out and it never made sense to me for many reason you just explained.
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
Thank you!🤍🤍
@Michaela-xi1zf2 жыл бұрын
Also, please do a video on tips for caring for high porosity hair. Thanks!
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
Will do!🤍
@MrWebmaster362 жыл бұрын
Makes sense! Thank you for providing scientific facts and visual support for your claim.
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
Thank you 🤍🤍
@drinksoymilk007 Жыл бұрын
OMG! Super helpful info. Thanks for explaining. This video should be viral and mandatory for all naturals. As a logical science-minded person, this porosity issue FINALLY makes sense.
@autumnjohnson2127 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this video. I learned a WHOLE lot from it. I always knew my hair was high porosity. I have to use 3 things to help my hair stay moist after I wash it; spray bottle with water, oil my scalp once a week, use a moisturizing lotion or cream and hair grease alone the shaft and ends of my hair to keep it from breaking off. My hair is extremely dry. I am in my late 50's and use henna and indigo to dye my hair and that is very drying also.
@uchihafatima71902 жыл бұрын
If I’m not low porosity I feel like there has to be another language we can use to define what our hair type is when it comes to it takin in/out moisture. I have friends that need to use cream every other day, while some of us only need to 2/3 times a month. I don’t think I have low porosity in a global way enough to compare it to another race, but I do think some of us do need less moisture then others in the black community
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
So true! High porosity is definitely a spectrum, I compared with other races because porosity is race specific xx
@uchihafatima71902 жыл бұрын
@@naturalnadinee so do you have a better way I could say thta? or is it just saying that I have low high porosity hair?
@chas19892 жыл бұрын
I agree. We need a new naming system. I thought my hair was low porosity but looking back it makes no sense🤦🏽♀️
@serenity2010sh Жыл бұрын
@@naturalnadinee I'm black but my mother is mixed race. My hair is low porosity. I will say I'm 25% Irish or less.
@Macmaniaaa Жыл бұрын
I think we can still use the terms low-high porosity as a way of describing our hair, but only as related to black hair. If we’re looking at porosity in a broader sense (across races) then the system is less helpful and confusing. So for example in a broader sense a black person would be high porosity as compared to an Asian person, but in a more confined and less broad perspective, that same black person would be low porosity as compared to another black person
@xiorbs67602 жыл бұрын
Makes sense, finding the right products and more importantly using them in the right manner, thanks love!
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
Yess for sure using them correctly! Thank you 🤍🤍🤍
@semoneg28262 жыл бұрын
Many people don't read instructions on products lol
@beforgiveness7720 Жыл бұрын
I could hug you. You clarified 50 years of poor quality information
@deborahthompson50412 жыл бұрын
Very informative and it makes sense .going to check out part 2. Thank you soo much for sharing your knowledge
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
Yeahh I feel like Part 2 makes everything come full circle😭 thank you babe🤍🤍
@TheFearlessBabe2 жыл бұрын
@@naturalnadinee So why does my hair not allow certain oils in. Even if it’s in a product, my hair will still be dry compared to the same exact product with a different oil. I used Cantù coconut oil and it wouldn’t hydrate my hair, but I used the same product with argon and it melted in.
@TheFearlessBabe2 жыл бұрын
@@naturalnadinee Also I have to use heat to condition my hair or there’s no difference. It literally feels like nothing changed lol
@memim66212 жыл бұрын
Oh my goodness! Thank you so so much for THIS. I did that water test and my hair floated on top for hours so then I thought OK, it must be low porosity. But, I was also very convinced my hair was high porosity by the way it behaved. ie loses moisture very easily and loves protein. So now I get it. It ALL makes sense. You are awesome! 👍🏽❤️😍 BTW, loving your hair ❤️
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
Yesss that hair porosity test needs to go in the bin! Glad you enjoyed the video and found it helpful🥺❤️ & thank you ❤️❤️
@uberhaute_naturalz842 жыл бұрын
The best crude test I've done and has given me accurate results so far is clarifying my hair with shampoo and then leaving it to air dry after blotting with my T-shirt. It dried within 2 hours which made me realise that I'm medium to high porosity.
@LakeGrace20272 жыл бұрын
How do you only have 2k views? This should be viral
@twohoursto2 жыл бұрын
What I got from this was that because a majority* of Afro hair is delicate, compared to other ethnicities its more prone to have raised cuticles thus most Afro textures are prone to high porosity. While those whose hair is less damaged have less raised cuticles thus lower porosity... HENCE the spectrum and how not one size fits all...thus a percentage of black people do in fact have low porosity hair 🤔 myself included as I tick all characteristics....so... full circle huh. Including the fact that I rarely have to moisturise my hair in fact the only time I moisturise my hair is washday which is once a month... *majority: i.e. not all
@cleopatra73962 жыл бұрын
THANK YOU!!!! I was over here writing a whole essay about qualifying words like, how hard is it to say "most" instead of "all" or "You might not have low porosity hair"? And especially when it comes to research I always wonder the details of the participants in the study. Did they really get the full range and variety of afro texture hair? How many people were a part of the study? You have black women making whole KZbin videos and rants about whether a certain person is really x y or z hair type or not. Our hair is not a monolith and it is not that simple. My hair is a mixture of fine and coarse with varying sizes of tight coils and I am also a true low porosity gal and do not have to re-moisturize my hair again until wash day. If I moisturize and seal properly, it stays moisturized. Also, while afro hair CAN be delicate, there are plenty of natural ladies out there with super thick, hard to break strands as well. I am just over blanket statements. I'm tired of the typing system, the circle system, scientific studies, and whatever else someone comes up with to try and categorize black people's hair with. There are way more types than any chart or scientific study can name. And porosity is a spectrum AND you have have more than one porosity on the same head. I have extremely tight coils but my hair hangs when it's wet, and it doesn't shrink up much at all when it dries (even with no product). What study does that fit into? People, at the end of the day just need to learn their hair, how it behaves, how to best retain moisture and do what works for them to reach their hair goals. Most things aren't one size fits all and that is certainly true for black hair. Think about it this way, I have been natural for ages and have watched tons of natural hair videos and read natural hair blogs and follow natural hair bloggers and in the past 20+ years I have only found ONE person who I could call my hair twin and we would be fraternal hair twins at that.
@twohoursto2 жыл бұрын
@@cleopatra7396 THANK YOU AS WELL! Thank you so much, I wrote the og comment while knowing none of these viewers would even care and they would just eat this up the way they eat everything up they're spewed at never taking the time to spot the video makers logical fallacies nor even think about the characteristics listed of low porosity hair to see if their hair fits those categories. The Lady is very misleading and is on a whole 'since me and this percentage of black people are like this, even though the experiment did not even begin to cover the many different types of Afro hair. Then EVERY SINGLE ONE OF YOU ARE LIKE THIS which obviously is not true . (also off topic/maybe petty: a study for criminal detection ? Even though as a community we aren't focused on in studies this annoyed me (you're telling me the only study for black hair porosity isn't only extremely limited but one based on criminal detection? (And yes I know they tested other races) but stil dang. Sorry for the rant lol.
@twohoursto2 жыл бұрын
@@cleopatra7396 plus a black lady I can name off the top of my head with low porosity hair (in alignment with the characteristics she stated) which can't be disputed is someone such as ebonyscurly.
@nethaniapierre81492 жыл бұрын
THANK YOU SIS THANK YOU. And I have low porosity hair. I don't have to re moisturize throughout the week because it doesn't need it. This info not good for BW who has low porosity hair like noooo.
@FineNaturalHairandFaith2 жыл бұрын
@@twohoursto THIS!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@876LND11 ай бұрын
Subscribed. Everything you said was sounded factual and motivated by emotion
@naturalnadinee11 ай бұрын
Thank you for saying emotion not anger 😭😭 people keep saying I’m angry, I’m just passionate welcome to the gang!🤍🤍🤍
@loxstar812 жыл бұрын
You are most definitely on to something...I'm fully invested in your explanation on porosity.
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
Thank you! Part 2 explains the science a bit better too xx
@breewadley22842 жыл бұрын
WOW THANX FOR THIS VIDEO..THIS NEEDS TO BE VIRAL!
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
Thank you!🤍
@JesusAlways1st Жыл бұрын
This is what I don’t understand. My mother and aunts and I’m sure their mothers knew nothing about low or high porosity hair. As little girls, my mother and aunts used homemade items to shampoo their hair and no conditioner. They probably used hair oil made from animal fat, maybe lard. When y mother got married and a little hair products began to be more available, not much, they used that. She, my aunts and they washed our hair once a month, comb and braided our hair in ponytails and air dried out hair overnight, and pressed our hair the next day. Didn’t know anything about a blow dryer. She used V-O5 shampoo on my hair because it was cheap and it was available. Never used conditioner. She used Blue Bergamot to oil my scalp. My mother, aunts, there daughters and myself all had long hair. My mother and her sister could sit on her hair. When I grew up and took over my hair care, I begin using special products, conditioners, blow drying… relaxers and I noticed I started having issues with my hair. I moved from Indiana where it was humid, and lived to Colorado where it’s extremely dry. I had major issues with dryness. I oiled my hair one day, and the next day, it was dry as if I never liked my scalp. I get chapped lips, my skin is always dry no matter what you apply. I drink 8-13 cups of water! I was told by a hair care professional to get a relaxer. Nothing worked and nothing has worked. I have been living in Colorado for over 40 years and no change. My point is, while things were so simple when I was a little girl and alone it’s my moms hair in doing just a simple hair wash and hair beautiful long and thick hair. Everything is so complicated now. Too many products and so much advice concerning everything and lot of disagreements. Just my opinion!! But it does make sense to wash the hair using clarifying shampoo and test for porosity without any hair products makes perfect sense to really know for sure! 🤦🏽♀️🤷🏽♀️😜🤪 😞☹️😖😩
@aishataviator2 жыл бұрын
I think what is important is if fellow naturalistas are able to understand how their hair retains moisture to serve as a basis for the types of products (thick or liquidy and in-between) that will help them with hair length retention, strength and resilience. I think describing porosity high, low and in between helps to identify that for many who have not yet cracked the code for their hair. Although I have 2 sisters (same parents), how our hair retains moisture are each very different. Water sits on my hair during a wash unless I squeeze/press it in and so does heavy thick cremes. As children our mother used the same heavy products on all 3 of our heads, my 2 sisters hair thrived with waist length hair and mine did not. However, as an adult, once I understood more about my hair in that it is indeed low porosity and figured out how to get and keep moisture in with lighter products like aloe vera and peppermint oil, it started to finally thrive.
@aishataviator Жыл бұрын
@Trinity M I think when you compare low porosity for straight hair versus curly hair is where you lose me. If you check out webmd description of low porosity the site does not delineate between straight hair vs curly hair the criteria to make the determination is the float test and the spray test to determine if and how well the strand of hair in question absorbs water. If you can point to the scientific reference that makes the distinction in only associating low porosity with straight hair let me know. There are other KZbinrs like power in your curls and others who have given solid advice on products for low po’s like me. So just bc this does not apply to you does not mean that it can’t possibly apply to others
@soothe-bynature196911 ай бұрын
Best freaking video on KZbin hands down!!! Definitely subscribing❤❤❤
@naturalnadinee11 ай бұрын
Thank you girl! More to come🤍🤍
@chanelvlyn Жыл бұрын
This video helped me so much... I felt so insecure for like more than a year thinking my hair was low porosity after doing that water and hair test. trying to change the products I used, knowing my family and friends had such healthy hair and would shame me for my “low porosity” hair. Thanks so much, I’ve learnt so much ❤ New subscriber, and you showed evidence spoke facts🙂
@naturalnadinee Жыл бұрын
Thank you hun & welcome I’m glad it acc made sense 😭🤍
@daricerobin2 жыл бұрын
Boom. Makes so much freakin sense! 👏👏👏👏 And I taught middle school science and yes DENSITY is what determines whether something will float or sink like👏 you 👏 said 👏 density and buoyancy
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
Yes! I don’t know where it came from that it determines porosity 😭 x thanks hun 🤍
@ab-rq7zi Жыл бұрын
You've just saved me from spending £££ on low porosity products. I thought id finally found the secret to what was holding my hair back but i was skeptical because there is no way my hair has anything in common with caucasian hair. Thank you so much for this ❤
@naturalnadinee Жыл бұрын
I’m glad! && right! That was the lightbulb moment for me nothing similar to Caucasian hair at all xx
@92spice182 жыл бұрын
I think you are expressing everything I’ve been feeling about the natural hair community. For years I’ve been confused and thinking I’m the only black person with high porosity since everyone else claims they have low porosity hair. When they wash their hair I can tell the hair repels water because of heavy products. Thank you for further information. I was using the LOCO (distilled water, light oil, cream, heavy oil or pomade) method to moisturize my hair which has worked for me. But I still need to do better at keeping my hair moisturized. I’m going to go back to acv rinses and attempt to use aloe and a little more protein to see if that works.
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
Honestly I feel you! I also thought I was low porosity at one point until I further understood why my hair behaves a certain way and did the research. Yes ACV rinses and low PH products will be your best friend for moisture retention and the more you train your hair to retain moisture the easier it will get over time hope it all starts to work! Xxxx
@azzyazeez2 жыл бұрын
14:45, I'm dying, when you clapped your hands, I felt that! 😂
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
Hahah I’m such a drama Queen🤣🤣🤣
@roshelwaite333210 ай бұрын
Wow! This video has changed the way I see my hair. All this time I've been thinking I had low porosity hair, what a waste. Now, I will treat my hair as high porosity all the time going forward and buy my hair products accordingly. Thank you so much for sharing. 🙂
@firstgenmoneymusings2 жыл бұрын
Never heard this before and it was truly eye opening. Thank you so much for sharing your expertise and perspective with us!
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed!🤍
@lolabunny68412 жыл бұрын
EVERY BLACK WOMAN NEEDS TO WATCH YOUR VIDEO! THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR THIS! AND YOU ARE ABSOLUTELY GORGEOUS, SMART AND AN ELOQUENT SPEAKER!! Much love 💕 🎀💖💕💗😇
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
Awww 🥺🥺 eloquent speaker that is actually so nice! Thank you so much 🤍🤍🤍
@librarianrose4472 Жыл бұрын
Why isn’t this viral?!
@analynnbrown28102 жыл бұрын
You helped so many of us lost ones boo keep it up! Now I know where to look, thank you!
@cfoster68042 жыл бұрын
🤯 This is absolutely game changing information right here! I always knew I was high porosity just because the way my hair behaves and always wondered what was wrong with my hair because most black women were claiming low porosity. Turns out I was normal all along.😁 I just got the Chi Enviro Smoothing treatment almost a week ago and so far I am absolutely loving it! It's basically a semi permanent cuticle sealer (wears off in about 4 months). Just doing this has had a very positive impact on the the breakage, dryness, and excessive tangles I was having. I am experiencing what it's like to have low porosity hair. I guess I'll fake it 'til I make it.🤭 This is something for people to look into if they don't want to be bothered with applying products regularly to achieve this. There's lots of videos on KZbin about smoothing treatments. Just 2-3 treatments should keep you covered all year. Also, Chi is not the only smoothing treatment out there. Avlon and Design Essentials both make one. This treatment should be a staple in black salons but I'm guessing because it's more time consuming is why we don't see it too often. Excellent video, subscribed!
@CreativePower.2 жыл бұрын
Society has made you believe you should have low porosity hair. NO! it's better to have high porosity because that's your hairs protection from the environment. People of color have the most protection. Just like your skin. It's melanin is it's protection. Ppl wake up.
@semoneg28262 жыл бұрын
It also have normal porosity hair which no one talks about
@keekssss2 жыл бұрын
You definitely cannot do a wash and go and leave the house with wet hair for the first 2-4 weeks after the chi enviro treatment unless you wanna walk around smelling like rotten egg and sewage water.
@hairsolutionschile72962 жыл бұрын
Do they finish the treatment with a flat iron? If so, I had something similar done, but it only worked the first time for me. I even surpassed my length plateau and I loved it so much. It gave me the hair I've always dreamed of, but the second and third time I got it done, I didn't get the same results. I brokenheartedly went back to fully natural. The heat damage just wasn't worth it 🤕 I have no clue why the treatment stopped working and I haven't been able to get an answer from hairstylists in my area when I bring it up 🤷🏻♀️
@HeleneGLmarie2 жыл бұрын
Hi, i am full blooded African, with 4c hair. Nothing mixed about me or parents. When stretched, my hair is in the middle of my back, i'm also a tall girl, 5'10". Since my second big chop at the end of 2019 I only stretch my hair without heat with braids and twists, so i really don't realize how long my hair s like with a silk press or whatever. I always thought i had low porosity like many black girls and i manage to remoisturize my hair only every 10 days and wash it every 4 weeks. I even plan to push my washdays to once every 2 months because the less water touches my hair the more my hair feels strong and i retain length. 🤷🏾♀️ My hair is hydrophobic 😂 and i think Low porous ? That's why it didn't make sense to me when you said: " If your hair is low porosity why are you constantly moisturizing it or the next day/ every 2 days". I was like what ??? 🙃 Cauuuse.... I don't ! Because my hair has low porosity, moisture get trapped in it for weeks and rehydrating again and again would lead me to hygral fatigue > cuticules damage > more single strand knots > more need to trim> less length retention ! But thanks to you, i realize something. Moisturizing it often, every 2-3 days was what i use to do after my first big chop in 2015. I had more tangles and knots and i didn't know about moisture overload/ hygral fatigue, i had to trim often, it was a depressive nightmare. I realized in 2019, the more water touches my hair, the more dry it gets !!! I didn't know about the cuticules stuff then. A white girl, "Sarah Ingle" i think made a video last year about " You Hair isn't dry, it's a lack of conditioners" and it was pretty much a confirmation of my personal observation since 2019. She went far in her researchs and explain that some "dry" hair under the microscope had in fact more water in it than some "moisturized" hair. The moisturized hair is in reality more dry (less water in the cuticules) but had more conditionners (sebum, oils, butters, silicones, mineral oils...). I really like your video and the science behind but i'm still not sure we are high porosity. Asians and Caucasians can't do days without washing/putting water on their hair because they say it gets greasy and dry. When Blacks do the same we end up with short hair, hair that doesn't outgrow a certain length plateau. But when Blacks do low maintenance, rare washdays in weeks/months, protective styles for weeks/months or even locks, then we start to see the length. Even here on KZbin every waist length 4c girl go for months of protective style before a washday. Why is it like that if we are high porosity ? 🤔 All this hair thinking 😮💨😅😂. I'll keep with what has worked for me.
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
I stopped reading when you said you wash your hair once every 4 weeks. if that’s what works for you then each to their own girl I got no tips for you😭 xx
@sundragon13 Жыл бұрын
Lower porosity hair gets oily a lot faster and has to be washed more frequently. Being able to go a long period of time without washing and still not have oily hair is more so a sign of high porosity. High porosity hair also breaks more easily.
@rastaurpasta87012 жыл бұрын
I’m so happy I’ve found you, I literally am in the process of this porosity test and my hair has been floating on top of the water for hours, yet I’ve always been told I was low porosity smh.. every product I usually buy is low porosity so now I know. Thanks this makes so much sense now, I appreciate the information..
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much!🤍🤍
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
Also I love your name🤣
@wilrodriguez81 Жыл бұрын
Sister🥰, you nailed it. It's simple and these are facts. I am of Afro Puerto Puerto RIcan descent. I am a mix of Black, Indigenous, and European, my hair is very high porosity. My hair is coily. I love how you explained everything. It was great. This is exactly why natural curly and coily hair needs moisture. Love this. You are also very beautiful. Well done
@patricegoodman51503 ай бұрын
I was so confused about my porosity of my hair because products stay on top of my hair and my hair is dry and greasy. It feels dry and I was confused. I’m glad I saw this because I was about to buy a whole bunch of products that I didn’t need, only thing I need to clarify shampoo because I have not been clarifying my hair in a while thank you for this video. You have cleared up my confusion. I’m from Shepherd Texas
@poquitovibes9432 Жыл бұрын
The chart in the beginning may be somewhat incorrect. I’ll explain. Asians usually have hair routines that they’ve been practicing for centuries. One example is using fermented rice water. Also they usually have a healthy diet. Caucasians usually have straight hair or very slight wavy hair. So like the Asians it’s straight, it’s also getting full sebum coverage. But at the same time Caucasians usually cleanse their hair daily and they are also big on using straightening tools almost daily. For example blow dryers and flat irons. So their hair cuticles is a little more raised than a lot of Asians. Lastly, people who have 4c type hair, or close to it have not always practiced healthy hair routines because they may have been told their hair is to rough and people may have comes through it roughly their entire childhood, they may have been relaxed and at shoulder length for years before figuring out these new things of caring for their type of hair. They may have used so much heat and products to lay down their curls that at some point the hair was so damaged and stressed that the cuticles are almost always raised and the hair always looks frizzy. All these examples could happen for any hair type. But these groups are the most dominate basically because of the ideas based behind each group hair care and upbringing. In short this chart will change in time as more and more people learn how to care for their hair. Not all 🖐🏾 have raised cuticles. Raised cuticles is a sign that the hair has not been treated nicely. It has nothing to with with being 🖐🏻 or 🖐🏾. It’s just that 🖐🏾 have it more because they usually handle it too rough, they don’t have patience when brushing it, they let it mat and build too much toxic product and dirt before cleaning and resetting it, or don’t take any time to care for it at all. Y’all know y’all be neglecting your hair and letting it tangle and get dry for days and weeks. Don’t say it’s genetics. That’s just like eating things that cause diabetes and blaming your grandparents genes. That’s not how genetics works. As babies most people are born free of health issues and hair issues. As time goes by it’s the parents and the child’s routines or lack of routine that cause health issues, skin issues, hair issues, and other issues. So they will need to change this chart if everyone starts having healthy hair in the future. Because many 🖐🏾 are finally learning how manage their hair correctly.
@ThatoMasege Жыл бұрын
Wow, this video was so informative. I've never even been interested in this porosity contest naturalistas usually have. I never even cared to find out what it even means to have low/high porosity hair. I've always just focused on growing healthy hair and finding or even making my own products in my kitchen that work for my hair, acv being one of those products. Honestly I don't even like putting oil in my hair cause it always feels so weighed down and somehow dries up very quickly as opposed to when I don't put oil in it. I will oil my scalp every now and then if I feel I need to, but I don't generally use oil on my hair shaft. Thank you, you've answered questions I never even knew I had. 🌹
@naturalnadinee Жыл бұрын
Thank you hun! I’m glad you found it helpful 🤍🤍
@LethalLemonLime2 жыл бұрын
I love this because I have been so sick of comments from black people saying "curl pattern doesn't matter. what matters is if your hair is low porosity or high porosity" and it's like... no it doesn't because all our hair is high porosity so...
@TreyBtw Жыл бұрын
i think part of the reason people with straight hair don’t need moisturizers is due to that they can get away with shampooing and conditioning way more often. not that they just straight up don’t moisturize. and afro hair doesn’t get less shine because of porosity. it’s be it’s curled up. we get a similar shine with styles like waves for example when we lay our curls down flat so that light can bounce off easier and give that silky look. not a porosity thing
@sundragon13 Жыл бұрын
My hair isn't straight it's 2c/3a, low porosity, and medium texture. My hair is so moisturized on its own that I don't even need conditioner. Meanwhile, I have a friend with very healthy undamaged straight hair but has much coarser strands and needs to use a lot of conditioner and leave in.
@laearth03302 жыл бұрын
My hair is definitely low porosity, I have to comb my hair for products to enter, if I don’t comb it then it will just sit on top of my hair like water does
@sundragon13 Жыл бұрын
This video is helpful because the natural hair community had me confused. For the longest time I didn't think I had low porosity hair because I didn't have all the signs, mainly that it doesn't take as long to dry or get wet. After struggling to find products that work for me, I eventually realized that maybe my hair is low porosity. Treating my hair like it's low porosity has been a game changer. My hair needs very little moisture. I can shampoo it and use no conditioner or leave in, and it will still be soft and shiny. This video explains a lot. Now I know why I don't have all the signs of "low porosity". I'm caucasian with 2c/3a hair, and my hair has not been damaged or chemically treated, so of course my hair is low porosity.
@kreationkollect10 ай бұрын
I believe you sis. I was never sure of my porosity. No complaints over here.
@missyjayjay12 жыл бұрын
Oh wow. Why they put us all in box like that lol. Black people have all different kind of textures. Do you think they mis-identify races at times? Seems like authorities have a baseline of what would be seen as the typical type of hair for certain races, which is understandable I guess. Because I have much more curly frizzy hair than my siblings; one has straighter wavy hair, doesn't really get frizzy at all. Also, LOVE the science terms!!! Helped me with the understanding a lot I didn't know about my hair and others. Can't wait to pass your channel on to others, thank you!!
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
Difference in textures exist in all races. They put us in that one box because all black peooles hair looks like this under a microscope. I would say it’s easier to mismatch identity of an Asian/Caucasian that it would be for a blacks person even then I’ve never heard it happen because the differences are very obvious. Frizz doesn’t really have much to do with it, all hair porosities can be prone to frizz regardless of race, && thank you!🤍
@missyjayjay12 жыл бұрын
@@naturalnadinee Ohhh okay. Just so I’m not confused, even a black person with a different hair texture (straight, wavy, curly) it would still show that person is black?
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
100% it’s very obvious to see racial specific differences regardless if the person has 3A hair or 4c hair
@semoneg28262 жыл бұрын
@@missyjayjay1 Yes the person is still black but they have mixed genes hair...
@ajfm4097 Жыл бұрын
I am so grateful. I thought l was low based on other hair videos but what you said made so much sense. Thank you so much...
@naturalnadinee Жыл бұрын
Aww thanks I’m glad it helped xx
@briacarter2349 Жыл бұрын
As a child my auntie would scratch my scalp the night b4 wash day. She'd wash my hair with warm water until it squeaked. Then worked in the conditioner. After she would use Royal Crown and put it in braids. My hair grew like crazy. Makes sense
@emeth14552 жыл бұрын
You described my hair exactly. I have always thought that I was high porosity hair, with different levels of high porosity all over my head. The crown area is the worst, and it is a different texture from the front. The front is a different texture from the back also and the back is the best texture on my head. I wish that all of my hair had the texture of the back. It stays moisturized longer. The density is thicker, and it does what I want it to do. The back of my hair can take hours to dry, but the front and the crown dry very quickly.
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
Oh the joys of having numerous porosities in one head of hair🤣 you gotta love it! But sounds like you have worked out what works for your hair which is perfect xx
@deandragivens2 жыл бұрын
Sounds like my hair! My back is my fav too.
@sakkarah1859 Жыл бұрын
My head is exactly the same. I wish all the hair on my head is the same as the hair at the back or near the nape of my neck
@keithmitchell5910 ай бұрын
great insight, how gorgeous you are! Im growing my hair so im learning so much. thank you
@naturalnadinee10 ай бұрын
Thank you so much! And all the best on your hair journey too!xx
@jazminalvarado8433 Жыл бұрын
I have been so confused for so many years. So thank you so much for sharing the facts!😍
@mermaidmomma3696 Жыл бұрын
Awesome information!!! Edit: I did the strand test and my hair at first floated, then sunk, then floated again! 😂😂😂 Our hair is porous.
@Michaela-xi1zf2 жыл бұрын
I loved this video! I hope you continue to do educational videos about Black hair. Perhaps, do one on silicones in Black hair---so many people say no silicones at all, but I would love to hear a chemical engineer perspective.
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
Wow yes! I will have to because there can definitely be place for silicones!! Thank you🤍
@uberhaute_naturalz842 жыл бұрын
Lab muffin, Afope Atoyebi and Curly Chemistry all have a video on silicone and nothing is wrong if you use silicone. Just clarify your hair often.💖
@uberhaute_naturalz842 жыл бұрын
@@naturalnadinee thanks for this video, sis💖💖
@rebekahtaylor8435 Жыл бұрын
You did such an amazing job explaining this!!! Excellent video!!!
@naturalnadinee Жыл бұрын
Thank you!😭 It’s difficult to include all the bits in but I’m glad you enjoyed
@ItsSunshyne8 ай бұрын
Never understood the water test so I honestly gave up learning my porosity. It took me sitting there and realizing that I have open cultiles (hence the frizz and constant dryness of the scalp) Your video is so informative. Thank you
@ups3rge11 ай бұрын
14:39 It's been a year since this video has come out. I came across it as I was doing some research on it and the more u explained it I realized how the average mind will go based off belief n feelings of something they heard rather than doing the research themselves. I had to direct this to myself and look at biology being overlooked. Biology is the key that u introduced n reminded me off. And on top the facts as well.
@naturalnadinee11 ай бұрын
Honestly, the information has been here all along xxx
@wendellpowell78532 жыл бұрын
Totally agree with you. Great job explaining! Thank you very much! 😊
@ranadar36322 жыл бұрын
Black people can have low porosity my sister has low porosity her hair gets weighed down easily and gets kinda straight when I apply water then it’s curly dry and my hair stays curly when wet and dry and takes forever to get wet
@renear89 Жыл бұрын
Your hair looks so much better before your new hair sealing technique. Your curl pattern looked healthier. Now it looks damaged
@naturalnadinee Жыл бұрын
This wasn’t my curl pattern😭 was a braid out but… thanks??
@BuzzardEggs Жыл бұрын
I am so glad that you wrote this comment because I thought that I was missing something: her hair looked beautiful in the first photo.
@belindachappell9875 Жыл бұрын
You had me hooked in the first 10 secs ❤😂 great video thank you
@rashida77772 жыл бұрын
I don't believe this is true. And even it was...Black Americans are such a mix of the world that I am sure they have inherited features to their hair from their varied ancestry. I have seen 3 types of textures on one head.
@semoneg28262 жыл бұрын
Not only black Americans I live in the Caribbean and black people in my country are mixes with, indian, Chinese, Spanish, Caucasian, Ameriandians etc.... Genes has influence pur hair type.... So the struggle is real
@patricianorris82192 жыл бұрын
I’m also from Jamaica and I’m half Indian &Chinese and my hair is both curly & straight in some parts
@renear89 Жыл бұрын
Belief and facts, as well as porosity and texture, are two different things. She provided evidence and research
@wilrodriguez81 Жыл бұрын
Texture is texture, she is explaining porosity. I have from 4a to 3a hair on my hair. I am Puertk RIcan, I'm of black, indigenous, and European descent. My hair is curly coily. I agree with you people of African descent have varied textures , but I always wondered why every single person with curly or coily hair always had to grease or moisturize their hair. I need to constantly moisturize my hair. She did a great job explaining it. I learned alot.
@milkchocolate630 Жыл бұрын
Bro she ain’t talking about texture 😂😂
@Antoinette_10282 жыл бұрын
I've just started my true hair journey to get my curls poppin. I've watched so many videos and couldn't really figure out if my hair was high or low porosity. This has helped tremendously.
@sarahevetucker23 күн бұрын
I knew my hair was high porosity. Thank you for confirming this, what a relief. 😅
@maryanyone Жыл бұрын
Brilliant and well articulated with facts! ... but here's the thing: there's a whole movement who believes what was out there and there is a multi million dollar industry that has been built around those beliefs. There are those who will argue but never with the use of any science to refute what you've said. And that's not a black people thing; it's just a people thing. I've also realized that people want the end result but not the journey. That's why they will watch videos with people who have "black" hair as far away from the African phenotype as possible and use the products pushed by those people because they feel that those products will get them that hair! Still, thanks for sharing this. Eventually people will come around...It will take time for them to understand that hair is just not that complicated and that black hair is not an offshoot of white hair (which is what has been studied and taught) but is just its own category. Keep up the great work!
@naturalnadinee Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this! It’s so true industries are being built over what’s being fed in our own hair. Black hair deserves it own separate categories and research and development instead of trying to put us in the same box as Asians and Caucasian hair.. baby steps but it’ll get better !🤍🤍🤍
@candyKane117i2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for making this video. I was convinced this whole time that I have low porosity hair
@shannadean409810 ай бұрын
I love this but there should be more research on WHY some of us have low porosity symptoms (I hope this is coming across right) versus our people whose hair receives water right away. I’m a cosmetologist so this is something that I’ve noticed, not saying it’s a problem, but there are definitely reasons that need to be documented because this is an area of research that I’ve never seen
@dayneshawilson13272 жыл бұрын
This makes so much sense! I thought I had low porosity hair. Now the question is how the heck do I get my hair to maintain moisture? 🧐
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
Girl me too!! I explain more in this video how to help your hair retain moisture better kzbin.info/www/bejne/n2PcdGVoadZjgaM
@serenity2010sh Жыл бұрын
Try using warm/hot water to open your hair shaft this will help absorb more product. If you believe your hair is really low porous.
@nines4498 Жыл бұрын
I agree with a few points in this video, mainly how unreliable the cup test is and that you aren't always low porosity if product sits on your hair, but I think there are too many factors to definitively say Black people are "naturally" high-porosity and that we cannot have low porosity hair, especially based off of studies where there is no control. Our hair has been stigmatized to the point where we've had to damage it with irons, perms, relaxers, etc throughout our history in order to get jobs & attend school. Another term for high-porosity hair is damaged or processed hair, so that right there should tell us hair porosity isn't always a genetic factor, it's also environmental. This would support the claim that Black hair is on average more porous than other races, but not the claim that we cannot have low-porosity. My hair was very high-porosity as a kid, but now as an adult it's changed a lot since I'm the one caring for it and not frying it to death/loading it with product for school. I cannot use coconut oil at all anymore, and if I do nothing to my hair (cause I have been lazy) it'll still take forever to dry and the next wash day forever to get wet, something that never happened when I was a kid. Just looking at my black friends & their hair, it's a mixed bag when it comes to the "silky shine" in their curls, which is influenced a lot but texture, not just porosity. Also, we can't really compare our moisture retention to Caucasian and Asian communities who wash their hair more frequently than we do, same folks who have called Black people dirty for going a week or longer without washing our hair because they don't understand our hair texture (or are just hateful). I agree most with the other commenters that said low-porosity hair looks different on different hair textures and that low-porosity means getting moisture in is also challenging, so if you didn't moisture low-porosity hair the right way then yeah you're gonna have to remoisturize it because it didn't get in, that doesn't mean it's not low porosity. If most Black people have a varied hair textures, we can't say we're all high-porosity without an actually study on this. Even with the few examples you gave you only compared 2/5 African strands to the high-porosity model. To me saying Black people can't have low-porosity hair is like saying we can't have hair that isn't type 4, a mixture of hair types, or a hair color other than black. Genetics is too varied for that.
@Junature Жыл бұрын
Yes, I listened to a video by Cyn Doll where she said the same thing.
@morganmorgym2 жыл бұрын
So I'm not crazy then or just too stupid to be unable to grasp my "hair porosity". My hair shows the same "supposedly" characteristics of both low and high porosity. It seems what the natural hair community is saying is low porosity is still high porosity.
@naturalnadinee2 жыл бұрын
There is an overlap in characteristics because people are misinformed on what low porosity actually is. Also in cosmetology porosity is rarely discussed (if ever). The only thing you want to know is how well your hair retains moisture
@serenity2010sh Жыл бұрын
@@naturalnadinee and you find that out by your hairs porous level...