spiral perm is rolled vertical and reg perm is rolled horizontal, I think.
yes, you do
When you get a perm it stays the way you want it unless you want to change it
A spiral perm is one that involves creating long, tight ringlets through the use of chemicals and hair curlers. Typically, one could expect to spend upwards of 75 dollars on a spiral perm.
The number of perm rods needed for a spiral perm can vary depending on the length and thickness of the hair. On average, between 20 to 30 perm rods may be used to create spiral curls throughout the hair. It's best to consult with a professional stylist to determine the exact number needed for your specific hair type and desired look.
It's your hair, do what you like with it.
yes it was a spiral perm if you look on the dime vision DVD when he was a kid he had medium straight hair and the late 80s had kinky curly have it is just a old spiral perm that's why his hair goes straight down.
Yes. You can describe the results you want to the hairstylist, and, if they're good, they can do it for you. You will get a lot of frizz if your hair is easily damaged. yes, tight, loose, spiral, and no to your second question, it is the conditioner that takes away the frizzy. use a perm with a real good conditioner in it.
No,It will just make it all frizzy!
Use a curling iron with a thin barrel
ringlet, lock, twist, spiral, coil, kink, whorl, rimp, wave, perm, bend
AnswerThe perm chemicals will ruin velcro rollers. There are special perm rods that can handle being bathed in the chemicals, and that's what you want to use.Answeryes you can use anything to perm the hair but the hair couldn't be wrapped smoothly with velcro rollers so it might look frizzy plus the tension won't be even and certain hairs that are wrapped too tight might end up breaking