Neith
New Member
Why is it said that there are calcium deposits in hair relaxed with no lye relaxers?
Firstly... DOES calcium hydroxide break down into actual calcium when exposed to air or water?
I'm no chemist, but I know that calcium and calcium hydroxide isn't the same thing.
Maybe there are some chemists or chemistry majors or just someone smarter than me knows!
Secondly... even if it DOES deposit calcium in the hair, wouldn't the use of the neutralizing/chelating shampoo (that comes with the kit) get it out? The cuticles are wide open, wouldn't it be removed?
Even if somehow the calcium wasn't removed by neutralizing... wouldn't it easily be removed by using a chelating/swimmers shampoo?
Does sodium hydroxide leave sodium deposits in the hair? If so, wouldn't you need to clarify/chelate to get that out?

Firstly... DOES calcium hydroxide break down into actual calcium when exposed to air or water?
I'm no chemist, but I know that calcium and calcium hydroxide isn't the same thing.
Maybe there are some chemists or chemistry majors or just someone smarter than me knows!
Secondly... even if it DOES deposit calcium in the hair, wouldn't the use of the neutralizing/chelating shampoo (that comes with the kit) get it out? The cuticles are wide open, wouldn't it be removed?
Even if somehow the calcium wasn't removed by neutralizing... wouldn't it easily be removed by using a chelating/swimmers shampoo?
Does sodium hydroxide leave sodium deposits in the hair? If so, wouldn't you need to clarify/chelate to get that out?




nono: about DMDM hydantoin and its use in hair products. Well, to prove that it doesn't release lots of formaldehyde and that the amount is really insignifcant, I was going to take samples of conditoners with it, heat them up to maybe 3-4 different degrees (all comparable with the heat from a dryer) and then test them for the level of formaldehyde released.
I'm definitely confused and looking for education before my next TU.