LOIS hair typing

HeChangedMyName

Well-Known Member
Does anyone here prefer this hair typing system?

I do. the numbers and the letters get so EXTRA for me. two people can have the same identical hair and classify them differently anywhere from 3C to 4B.

Before you begin, please keep in mind that a healthy, undamaged, virgin hair strand, meaning one that is not processed, relaxed or colored, is needed. Examine Your Hair Strand: Select a single strand of the most common type of hair on your head. Aim for 70%, so if you have different textures, use the most common texture on your head. The hair should be freshly washed without products applied to it and rinsed in cold water. Or, gently rinse a single hair with a little dish detergent and rinse in cold water. Allow the hair to dry on a bit of paper towel so that you can look at the pattern without touching it.

Find Your Pattern:

L - If the hair has all bends, right angles and folds with little to no curve then you are daughter L.

O - If the strand is rolled up into the shape of one or several zeros like a spiral, then you are daughter O.

I - If the hair lies mostly flat with no distinctive curve or bend you are daughter I.

S - If the strand looks like a wavy line with hills and valleys then you are daughter S.

You may have a combination of the LOIS letters, possibly with one dominant. If you cannot see one letter over the others, then combine the letters. Example: LO or IL or OS..

Find Your Strand size:
A strand of frayed thread is about the thickness of a medium sized strand of human hair. If your strand is larger than this, then your hair is thick. If your strand is smaller than this, hair is thin, or fine..

Find Your Texture:
Shine is a sharp reflection of light while Sheen is a dull reflection of light.

Thready - Hair as a low sheen, with high shine if the hair is held taut (as in a braid), with low frizz. Wets easily but water dries out quickly.

Wiry - Hair has a sparkly sheen, with low shine and low frizz. Water beads up or bounces off the hair strands. Hair never seems to get fully wet.

Cottony - Hair has a low sheen, a high shine if the hair is held taunt and has high frizz. Absorbs water quickly but does not get thoroughly wet very fast.

Spongy - Hair has a high sheen with low shine with a compacted looking frizz. Absorbs water before it gets thoroughly wet.

Silky - Hair has low sheen, a very high shine, with a lot or low frizz. Easily wets in water.
http://www.tytecurl.com/v02/hairtypes.htm
 
I am a combination of L and S with thin strands of cottony spongy hair.

Here's my hair at 9 weeks post. its an old pic, but my hair is the same

SUNP0014-vi.jpg
 
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Thanks for posting this, it's very detailed :yep:

I personally prefer the 3C, 4A etc; system only because it's the first one I learned. But this looks interesting
 
I remember Ole' LOIS! :grin: This was the first typing system I used as a natural.

I think that I am a medium O-S with cottony/silky hair. Based on the descriptions I don't know that there are enough factors distinguishing the types. I could technically be silky, cottony, and a little spongy. :spinning: Me and my wonky hair...

Did you happen to find any product reviews for each type, HeChangedMyName? I would love to know if there were any suggestions included with this article.
 
I remember Ole' LOIS! :grin: This was the first typing system I used as a natural.

I think that I am a medium O-S with cottony/silky hair. Based on the descriptions I don't know that there are enough factors distinguishing the types. I could technically be silky, cottony, and a little spongy. :spinning: Me and my wonky hair...

Did you happen to find any product reviews for each type, HeChangedMyName? I would love to know if there were any suggestions included with this article.

You know I didn't even think to look for that, but it would be very helpful. Although each head of hair is different, I believe specific products for each hair type would be great. I know they have that new pantene line that is specific to hair type, but I don't know how those types are defined.
 
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