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Our daughter is 7 weeks old. She's biracial... AA/CC (I think I abreviated that right, based on posts I've seen.) She has lots of hair for a newborn, and it's soft, fine and straight. I'm assuming it will eventually get at least wavy if not curly, though she hasn't lost much and it now seems to be getting longer and covering her head more (For a baby... it's not long enough for barrettes or anything). I've been wondering what I can expect as far as hair changes, hair care, etc. I'm sure there's quite a spectrum, but what have others experienced? Right now we just wash it with the baby bath/ shampoo combo stuff we got from the hospital, about twice a week during her bath and I brush it if it looks messy.
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Hi, You daughter's hair sounds much like my daughter's hair. It will change though! I noticed her hair started to change when she was about 3 months old. She is now 3 years old. I did not start using conditioning product on her hair till she was about 5 months old. You'll learn her hair as she gets older. I now condition her hair in the morning & before she goes to bed and I wash it only once a week (unless she's had a fun day in the sand box). If I do not condition her hair, it gets very dry. I buy products called "Beautiful Beginnings" by Dark & lovely". I found that the only place I am able to find hair products for children is at WalMart. She has beautiful curly hair. I have to admit that it took me a while to get use to her hair. You cannot treat their hair like you do your own. Good luck w/your baby! Enjoy!! :flower:
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My daughter is full AA and had a full head of thick curls, but I didn't need any products until she was 3 mo. Then i used detangler/leave in conditioner spray from Beautiful Beginnings. As you can tell by her hair now I have to use something much more conditioning. I now use Carol's Daughters Hair Butter and it is awesome. They also have baby products too.
Hi! DD is AA/CC and was born with a full head of straight soft hair. When she was around 6 months, 80% of it fell out sometimes in big chunks. A few months later it started to thicken up again. Now, if it has been recently brushed, she has soft curls. A few hours after brushing it looks more kinky. When it started coming back in, I started using my conditioner (Nexxus Hummectress) on it. Just recently (she's 17 months now) her hair has been looking dry again. So, I asked around and this week started using Curly Q every day on it. It does seem to make a difference in the moisture level and detangling. We started off by washing her hair a couple of times a week. Now we're down to once a week because of the dryness. Moira
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Our daughter is AA/CC. She is now 6 years old & her hair has changed soooooo often I can't even tell you! When she was born, she had little hair & very soft & straight. When she was about 6 months old she had a Mohawk of soft loose curls. At a year she had a full head of loose soft curls, at 18 months old you could tell she was biracial as her hair started to get tighter curls.
Until she was about 2 or so, I just used normal baby shampoo. I kept it conditioned usually with a leave in hair conditioner, a light one. When her hair started to become coarser, which was at about 2 or so, then I began trying different products. As she got older, her hair would change & we'd try something else. I STILL haven't found the ONE product that works EVERYTIME!
Deb
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DS is AA. At birth his hair was very straight, fine (but a lot of it) and black, with sort of an "oily" sheen to it. Many of my AA friends told me it would fall out but it didn't -- it just gradually changed over time until now it's very tightly curled, thick and beautiful. It probably took 2 years to begin to look like it does now.
I keep it really short now, but I didn't cut it until he was about 15 months in keeping with the cultural practices in the area I was living at the time. I used a conditioner and shampoo from Cornrows and Company (you can order it off the web) which I really liked. I still use the conditioner occaisionally when he has enough hair to condition.
I'm latina w/wavy hair but my mom has really curly hair. Her hair is very thin & curly. She just conditions it. I beleive she uses Pantene for curly hair. I know that you probably won't want to use that on you 9 month old but maybe when she gets older...I don't think I'd use the same products as for AA hair. My daughter is AA/Hisp and the products I use on her hair would make my mom's hair too oily. It's just too rich for her hair. Does Johnsons & Johnson's make a conditioner? I'm sorry that I don't have any product recommendation...the only thing I can tell you is that the product for AA hair is probalby too rich for Hisp hair.
Good Luck!
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Try to stay as far away from products that have ingredients ending in -cone (dimethicone, for instance) as those will dry out the hair. I stopped using a brush on my daughter's (aa/cc) hair at the sign of the first curl (around 12 months). Her hair is fine, curly ringlets, and lots of them. We don't shampoo her hair. Ever. We just condition it once a week in the summer, twice a week in the winter (generally). We went through a lot of products, but what worked for her was the Bumble & Bumble Curl Conscious conditioner. We've been using that for about 2 years now. To cleanse her hair, I spray it with a lavender mist every day then comb through it with a wide tooth comb. To make the lavender mist you boil 1/2 gallon of water on the stove, cover, and let simmer for 1 hour. Check to make sure the water is not boiling out. Add 5 drops of lavender essential oil (not perfume grade), stir, and let sit until cool. Pour into spray bottles and use as needed. We learned our lesson on detanglers. Just don't. ; ) They all have too much alcohol. Go for more natural oils to use as detanglers, if you can. We put her hair up every night, usually in one or two buns secured with bobby pins on the top of her head. Sometimes I will just braid the back into a ponytail, too. Have fun! It will change a lot and you'll go through tons of products to find the right one, but you'll get it. And then it will change again. HA! No, really, every child's hair is different. We love the book Curly Girl! Lots of great tips, ideas, and recipes.