you put one piece over the other as if doing a regular braid.
take three small pieces of hair, and do a normal braid. Switch the left hand piece with the middle, then the right hand piece with the middle (that used to be the left). Repeat until you are half way through the natural hair and extensions being used. Upon reaching your desired amount of coverage (meaning the amount of hair you want in the braid and the amount you want hanging), the suggested amount of coverage is after your natural hair ends. Then knot it off with a slip knot and move on to the next braid.
You take a little lane of hair, depending on how thick you want it to be, then part it into two. With both hands having one half-twist each half at the same time and criss-cross them (put one on top the other) repeat that till the end. Its a little hard, so just practice and you'll get very good at it.
Cut braids down to your own hair length and slather with conditioner. Section the hair off and comb out sections with a tiny toothed combed. The synthetic hair will slide off.
Secure micro braids with a rubber band at the end of the braid. Place it where the slip know was created. The rubber band must be wrapped around the braid several times to make it as tight as possible.
don't know if you can. Um my suggestion is to just take tiny sections of hair and just braid it normally, like any other, braid. Just start close to the scalp and braid down a small section. Like small, small section and split that into three small sections like a normal braid and braid down until you get to the end(s). I don't know exactly what you could do for
The sprays I recommend for it is Volumax Stuck Up and they are very powerful so your braids will stay in. :)
you can have a fishtail braid, a french braid, a english ( normal) braid, a swiss braid , invisible braids, a dutch braid, a crown braid, a flower braid, a tree braid, african braids, and an Averson braid.
I'm not sure, but I have a list...Fishtail braid, French braid, Dutch braid, and the waterfall braid.
Yes. However...are you talking about the real tight braids lots of African-American women have? Those are called micro braids. Weaves are a form of hair extension, where they braid (or "weave," which is where this got its name) extra hair into yours.
it was either a touch braid or a french braid. most likely a touch braid
well you simply braid the leather strips like its a braid.
you start from the back of the head near the neck and you part a horizontal line going from left to right then you part vertically making a box then you take that section of hair and braid it so its not attached to scalp like cornrows then you make another box next to the one you just made and braid that section continue parting boxes and braiding until you complete the whole head
It's a "fancy" term for anyone that can braid and is LICENSED to braid hair.
around $20 in stores for the good kind. and uue may need two bags. but its $13 for the kind that'll get nappy fast.
it is a braid hippies wear