10/23/13 10:52:28AM @john-nosko:
I had some braid dreads in an old set I had. They dreaded but stayed skinner and stiffer on the braided part and as they grew out the new dread growth was bigger around. Make sure not to use rubberbands no matter what method you choose because that is what ruined that set of mine.
welcome thats not a good idea for 2 reasons 1 braids to dreads takes longer then natural dreads because they have to unbraid 1st 2 natural sections are better because they often try to reject forced sectioning and revert to natural splitting at the rootrs or combining no matter how much you seperate
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10/23/13 10:52:28AM @john-nosko:
I had some braid dreads in an old set I had. They dreaded but stayed skinner and stiffer on the braided part and as they grew out the new dread growth was bigger around. Make sure not to use rubberbands no matter what method you choose because that is what ruined that set of mine.
welcome thats not a good idea for 2 reasons 1 braids to dreads takes longer then natural dreads because they have to unbraid 1st 2 natural sections are better because they often try to reject forced sectioning and revert to natural splitting at the rootrs or combining no matter how much you seperate
I had some braid dreads in an old set I had. They dreaded but stayed skinner and stiffer on the braided part and as they grew out the new dread growth was bigger around. Make sure not to use rubberbands no matter what method you choose because that is what ruined that set of mine.
well natural or tnr are good options just if you braid it takes longer since the braids have to unravel 1st in order to dread
id recomend natural to anyone (and though you start out wanting order the most disorderly 1 will be your fave)
tnr (twist and rip) is another option that will give ya lil more control
just a heads up its pretty common that people who start with tnr or backcomb wished they went natural many even start over
take yoir time read peoples experiences
u can start the natural process today as you read and decide then in a week or 2 if you want tnr if not just continue natural
but if you tnr then decide you wanted to go natural its a step backwards
welcome thats not a good idea for 2 reasons 1 braids to dreads takes longer then natural dreads because they have to unbraid 1st 2 natural sections are better because they often try to reject forced sectioning and revert to natural splitting at the rootrs or combining no matter how much you seperate
I had some braid dreads in an old set I had. They dreaded but stayed skinner and stiffer on the braided part and as they grew out the new dread growth was bigger around. Make sure not to use rubberbands no matter what method you choose because that is what ruined that set of mine.
well natural or tnr are good options just if you braid it takes longer since the braids have to unravel 1st in order to dread
id recomend natural to anyone (and though you start out wanting order the most disorderly 1 will be your fave)
tnr (twist and rip) is another option that will give ya lil more control
just a heads up its pretty common that people who start with tnr or backcomb wished they went natural many even start over
take yoir time read peoples experiences
u can start the natural process today as you read and decide then in a week or 2 if you want tnr if not just continue natural
but if you tnr then decide you wanted to go natural its a step backwards
welcome thats not a good idea for 2 reasons 1 braids to dreads takes longer then natural dreads because they have to unbraid 1st 2 natural sections are better because they often try to reject forced sectioning and revert to natural splitting at the rootrs or combining no matter how much you seperate