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I'm going to show you now how to tease hair. So what I'm going to do is I'm going to start
in the crown, which is the highest point of the head. And I'm going to take a little thin
section, I'm going to comb it up using a rat-tailed comb. All the way up, you wanted to de-tangle
the hair before you tease it. Now, I'm going to start midway down and I'm going to just
rake the hair to the bottom. I'm just going to stack that on top of each other. And you
can see, I'm not moving too much, but I'm not really aggressively doing it and we'll
get a really nice tease out of it.
So, you always want to start too big when you're teasing. So now, I would, if you just
wanted a little bump at the crown, continue on doing that. Do a second section right after
that. And then maybe you go to the side of that. And a great way to remove the tease
is to actually go the opposite direction of the hair and it should just remove very quickly.
And you take clean sections that are nice to the hair.
Teasing is becoming kind of a lost art form. A lot of my clients don't know how to it,
don't even know what it is. And as you long as you do it pretty gently like that, it shouldn't
damage the hair. I will say, I did spray a little bit of dry shampoo in her roots right
now, which acts as a really beautiful base for the tease, as you can see. And I'm going
to go in with a light-hold hairspray and just set the tease in place. You can do this as
you go or you can just come in afterwards like I am and do it.
So what I'm going to do is we're going to give her kind a Brigitte Bardot-y look. I'm
going to take a flat brush that has a mixture of natural and synthetic bristles in it and
I'm going to actually start at the base. And I'm just smoothing; I'm not raking all the
way through, I'm just smoothing the top layer of that tease. And you can see how pliable
it is. You can brush it out, put it back in just by adding a little bit of control to
it. This is a great way to add just a little bit of height to any kind of a style. If you
were going to do a low chignon or a ponytail or a half-up/half-down, it's a great way to
start.
So then once you get your tease kind of brushed out and smooth, you can go back in with the
end of your rat-tail comb and pop it back up. So if you feel like you've lost a little
bit too much shape, I would definitely go in there and check your symmetry. You can
see if you need to add a little bit more of a tease. You can also come in diagonally and
just kind of hit a little tease here and there, if you wanted to add just a little bit more
volume to the sides. And now what I'm going to do is I'm just going to take my thumbs.
If I were doing this at home, I would do one thumb here and one thumb on the other side
and just pull back and I'm going to create a nice little bump for her. And you're really
just taking the hair on the sides and pulling it back. A little half-twist back there and
pop a couple of bobby pins in. Let me turn her around so you can see.
So I've gathered up my two sections. I did a half-turn and then I popped a bobby pin
in there. And the nice thing about putting a tease anywhere is, your bobby pins just
stay in there so nicely. So if you're going to do an up-do or anything, I would even tease
just the root of where you're going to put that up-do at. So from here, if you want to
keep it really beachy, you can just leave it as is. You can curl it, you can put it
in a ponytail, whatever you wanted to do. But that's just a great a little trick on
how to tease your hair.