hi, well im 14 and a guy. i have medium legnth hair, thats kind of thick and curly. i want the back of my hair to stand up, like be spikey and not fall but it just wont happen! i dont know if its the hair or the dozens of products ive tried it with. any advice?
karenR answered Saturday August 19 2006, 11:10 pm: I don't know the style you are going for but this
site tells how to put liberty spikes in your hair.
They may not be the style you are going for but whatever they use to make them stand up would probably work for other styles too. :)
LM answered Saturday August 19 2006, 10:51 pm: Try a stronger hold gel, or maybe a wax. I know that Bed Head has something called mohawk gel; it comes in a silver squeeze bottle. got2b also has a couple strong hold gels, along with a Freeze spray (in a yellow can) that I've heard works great.
The problem may also be with your hair. You can try cutting it if nothing else works. And if you hate it, it'll grow back. So no worries! [ LM's advice column | Ask LM A Question ]
drklink14 answered Saturday August 19 2006, 10:23 pm: i dont think that your hair can be spiked up becuase its kinda long and when hair is long it gives it weigh and wont stay up. try cutting it or try some gel that hardens quickly [ drklink14's advice column | Ask drklink14 A Question ]
xEVYx answered Saturday August 19 2006, 9:48 pm: Well im guessing you're using gel of some sort. If you haven't tried using hairspray, I'd say that should def do it, if it's a strong hold kind. Or use both of them if one doesn't work, but put the gel in first.
Annnd if that doesn't work, try putting a straightening cream in it, it's like $14, anyways put that in it.. fix it how you want, then hairspray it.
Attention: NOTHING on this site may be reproduced in any fashion whatsoever without explicit consent (in writing) of the owner of said material, unless otherwise stated on the page where the content originated. Search engines are free to index and cache our content. Users who post their account names or personal information in their questions have no expectation of privacy beyond that point for anything they disclose. Questions are otherwise considered anonymous to the general public.