Saturday, December 8, 2012

What type of shampoo is suitable for my hair type?

Q. I have recently colored my hair and have switched to using Tresemme color protecting shampoo. I was told by one sales person that it isn�t necessary to use a color protecting range, so I bought Schwarzkopf ultimate repair range for dry and damaged hair (I�m concern the dyes will cause my hair to be brittle). I�ve been using these two alternately and I wash my hair every other day. Lately I noticed some flaking and my scalp feels itchy if I skip washing my hair. Is the type of shampoo that�s causing it or is it because I use two different shampoos? If I should only use one, should I use a shampoo specifically for colored hair or should I address the flaking/dandruff problem?

A. I suggest you keep one of the two. Washing with a different shampoo every other day is too close. Perhaps you can do switch shampoos every week.


if selsun blue and denorex have not worked for my dandruff, will tea tree shampoo work?
Q. i've been reading on answers that some people say this shampoo can control dandruff, is there even a chance this stuff will work if two strong shampoo's like the ones i've used haven't done anything.
my dandruff is very minor but no shampoo i've used has seemed to make it much better, or is there something else i should try.

A. conditioner helped me. selsun blue has never worked for me either. it made my my hair dry out and start to fall out. conditioner moisturized my scalp and it got rid of almost all of my dandruff.


A shampoo for oily scalp and dry hair?
Q. I can't really understand my hair. If I use conditioner ONLY at the ends (my hair is short) my roots are getting so greasy and the ends dry! I've tried two shampoos from H&S, one from tresemmé and a salon one.

A. Pantene hairfall


Any suggestions for getting rid of fleas in your home?
Q. I have bombed the house twice within the past two weeks, shampooed the carpet and vacuumed daily with no relief... Any suggestions? We don't have any indoor pets and are unsure of where they are coming from... HELP!!!

A. Bringing them in on your shoes & socks most likely.

They're attracted to warmth/light....Here's a clever free homemade device: Get any small LIGHT BULB, lamp, even a night-light--suspend it about 12" off the floor. DIRECTLY under it, place a shallow dish of WATER into which you've agitated a little liquid dish DETERGENT. Darken the room, leave the bulb on & WAIT. Check it in an hour to see if you've caught any, if so great! If not, move the stuff to another room & do the test again until you've covered all rooms.

This has worked for me for YEARS. NO flea sprays or bombs! (Actually my brother replaced my homemade method with one he found in some mail order catalog, it's all in one unit,) but I used the homemade method with just as much success! ( And another thing to find the most heavily infested areas, just walk around the room for a few minutes in white socks. They WILL attach themselves to the socks & you can easily see them.)

Anyway, in the flea trap, you don't need any pesticide in the water because the detergent slicks their bodies so they can't properly jump, then they drown.





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