it works best when u wash it just like human hair
2006-12-19 19:42:47
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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1.Fill a basin with lukewarm water.
2. Add a capful of wig shampoo and conditioner mix with water.
If the wig has odors, you may add a teaspoon of baking soda to the basin.
Never use regular shampoo on synthetic wigs.
3. Gently move the wig in the water about one minute until wig is saturated.
4. Gently clean the part stained until clean.
5. Leave the wig about 20 minutes.
6. Rinse it with cool clean water.
7. Gently squeeze the wig to remove water.
Do not wring or twist the wig.
8. Spray on the wig with wig conditioner or wig spray.
9. Spread the wig out on a dry towel and leave it until it dry.
10.Style the wig
2006-12-20 03:45:45
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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* STEP 1: Remove the wig.
* STEP 2: Brush the wig gently with a wig brush, getting rid of all tangles.
* STEP 3: Fill a sink with cold water.
* STEP 4: Add a capful (about 1 tbsp.) of wig shampoo.
* STEP 5: Place the wig in soapy water and swish it around with your fingers for a minute or two.
* STEP 6: Use a soft toothbrush to remove any makeup stains. Use a paste of baking soda and shampoo on stubborn makeup stains.
* STEP 7: Let the wig soak in the sink for about five minutes.
* STEP 8: Drain the soapy water out and refill the sink with clean, cool water.
* STEP 9: Rinse the wig until all the shampoo is removed. You may have to change the water a few times.
* STEP 10: Gently blot the excess water with a dry towel. Do not wring the wig out.
* STEP 11: Let the wig air-dry on a wig stand, or turn it inside out and lay flat to dry.
* STEP 12: Spray on a wig conditioner and style your wig after it has dried.
2006-12-20 04:58:58
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Washing Wigs (synthetic):
Depending on how often you wear your wig and in what conditions (heat, humidity, level of sweating, with or without a skull cap), you usually want to wash your wig after wearing it a dozen or so times, or once a year (whichever comes first). Again, depending how often you wear a wig and in what conditions, a good synthetic wig should last about 3 - 7 years if worn with a skull cap -- which you should always do!
Fill the sink or basin with luke-warm water and a small amount of Woolite detergent or your own shampoo (also, Brandywine brand make hair care products especially for synthetic wigs).
Place the wig in the water to soak for about 10 - 15 minutes. Rub gently on the places where the grease paint has come in contact with the cap or fibers. Extra soap may be used in these places. If that doesn't get the grease paint out, try using some Mehron makeup remover when the cap is dry again.
Squeeze the soapy water through the wig several times and then remove from the sink.
Drain the water and re-fill the sink with clean luke-warm water. Place the wig back in the water and swish gently to rinse. DO NOT RUN YOUR WIG UNDER A RUNNING FAUCET -- this will tangle the fibers!
Repeat step #4 as many times as necessary to remove all the soap. You can put conditioner in a straight wig at this point and rinse out again.
Squeeze the excess water out of the wig -- DO NOT WRING.
Lay the wig out on a towel and roll it up. Squeeze the towel to soak up the excess water.
Shake the wig out and put it on a wig head to dry. You may want to put some styling gel on the curly wigs at this point, or some spray conditioner if it looks tangled. Do not comb the wig while it is wet, since this will pull the fibers out of the cap. Do NOT use a hairdryer on a synthetic wig -- IT WILL MELT.
After it has completely dried, you may use a pick or wide-toothed comb to detangle the fibers. A leave-in spray conditioner can help to ease this process. Comb and style your straight wigs. Never brush or comb through a curly wig -- this makes them frizzy. You can, however, use a pick to loosen the fibers at the cap of a curly wig.
http://www.mooseburger.com/pricilla/care.html
Synthetic Wigs
Fill your sink basin with cool water.
Add a capful of synthetic wig shampoo and blend in. Never use regular shampoo on synthetic wigs! If the wig has picked up the odor of smoke or other strong odors, you may add a teaspoon of baking soda to your basin, and blend in.
Gently swish the wig or piece in the water for about 30 seconds to a minute until the wig is saturated. Gently scrub the front of the wig cap, where it meets the forehead until clean.
Leave the wig soak in the wig basin for about 15 minutes
Empty the wig basin of water and rinse the wig or piece in cool water. It is very important to use cool water on curly wigs, as warm water will over-relax the curls of wigs.
Gently squeeze excess water out of wig. Do not rub or twist your wig.
Spread the wig out on a thirsty towel and leave in a ventilated area to dry overnight. You should spray on a little leave-on wig conditioner, when you start the drying process.
When the wig is entirely dry, and not before, re-style the wig gently. We recommend a wig pick and not a brush or wig brush. Shaking and fluffing by hand is your best starting point for wig styling. We offer good quality wig shampoo and conditioner for our customers. Do not use regular shampoo. It is too strong even for human hair wigs.
Human Hair Wigs
Follow the same first seven steps as above using lukewarm water instead of cool, and the manufacturer's prescribed wig shampoo and conditioner for your human hair wig.
Wigs may be set in rollers if desired and placed under a dryer or left overnight to dry at your disgresssion. A hot curling iron may be used on human hair wigs. We offer human hair wig conditioner and shampoo for our customers.
http://www.hairaddition.com/wig_washing.htm
2006-12-21 08:03:27
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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In the same manner you would wash your own hair.
2006-12-20 03:43:04
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answer #5
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answered by maamu 6
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Same as non-humans.
2006-12-20 03:44:15
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answer #6
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answered by grannywinkie 6
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wash it like your original hair
2006-12-20 04:38:05
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answer #7
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answered by rajan naidu 7
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no idea
2006-12-20 03:55:17
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answer #8
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answered by schizophrenic 2
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