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What everyone gets wrong with shampoo
Lots of people say you have to use sulfate-free shampoo to avoid damaging or stripping your hair.Ā There also people who say you have to use shampoo with sulfates to get your hair clean.
They are both wrong.
Academic hair science is a mess. Hair is very diverse. Different hair reacts differently to ingredients. Ingredients work similarly on skin but with hair, ingredients work differently.
If 100 people use glycerin on their skin, you might have 60 peopleās skin get more hydrated and improve, 20 peopleās skin stays around the same, the final 20 might get worse for some reason ā like the glycerin helped some other ingredient penetrate and their skin got irritated, or they have an allergy. Thereās still complexity, but you wouldnāt have half the peopleās skin dry out more. But thatās kind of how it is with hair.
Variation in curl pattern can also affect how ingredients work.
When it comes to wet vs dry detangling, water makes hair weaker inside and cuticles raise so you should detangle when dry. At least on straight hair. But on curly hair, hair sticks less to each other (like spiral pasta vs spaghetti pasta) and the weakening bonds makes it less damaging and results in less breakage. But even then, we still donāt know everything (which is better for wavy hair, what if you use a brush or comb, what if you bleach your hair, what if your hair is longer, etc.). Thereās a lot of variables.
Hair science is really sparse. You canāt generalize hair. Even things like humidity can change the results. The structure of hair as we know it is still evolving and there isnāt a lot of consistency in terminology.
For example, around the late 90s, some hair scientists decided that half the protein in hair wouldnāt be called keratin anymore. But not everyone follows this. Youāll see things like āhair is 80% keratin by massā in a paper from 2017. Itās clear theyāre using the old definition ā but if a paper says āwe concluded that this ingredient works on keratin in hairā, what do they mean by ākeratin?"
Hair products arenāt about individual ingredients, it is about the overall formulation. Sulfates usually refers to sodium lauryl sulfate and sodium laureth sulfate, which are surfactants. Surfactants help break up oil and mingle with water so you can rinse it. Sulfates have sulfate heads, the tails are similar to other surfactants.
These 4 diagrams show 4 different ways that shampoos clean at a microscopic level ā each diagram goes from left to right. The pink tadpoles are the surfactants.
You can see that the surfactants are working together to clean the hair. This is called a supramolecular process, where molecules are interacting without going through a chemical reaction.
And all 4 of these are probably happening on your hair at the same time, to different extents ā thereās probably more mechanisms still to be discovered.
How much of each one is happening depends on the formula of the shampoo and what type of stuff you are cleaning off.
If you look at the ingredients, youāll have 3 or more surfactants. If you change the ratio of the ingredients or swap one of these surfactants with something else, the shampoo will work differently. Plus thereās other ingredients like polymers to take into account. The texture of the shampoo and opening of the bottle changes how it disperses and spreads as well.
Even just checking the pH of a product isnāt the whole picture when it is so complex.
Cosmetic formulators spend a lot of time just doing trial and error, making formulas and trying them out. Changing little things about the formula causes big changes.
Good Housekeeping did a test with 10 shampoo and conditioner pairings. Some had sulfates and some didnāt. The set that stripped hair dye the least had sulfates ā it was Tresemmeās Keratin Smooth Color set.
Formulators know that people who go for sulfate free want a gentler shampoo so thatās what they aim for when making the formulation. They know thereās all these widespread myths about sulfates being harsh ā theyāve been around since the 90s. Adding sulfates doesnāt mean it will strip more. Thereās a good chance that if you grab a random shampoo with sulfates, and a random shampoo without sulfates, the one with sulfates will clean better because of product design and thatās how they were formulated. Itās not because just adding sulfates automatically makes shampoos strip more. They might have also added other ingredients to make the hair feel cleaner.
How well it foams doesnāt tell you how well it cleans. How well something foams depends on how a formula interacts with air and water to stabilise a thin stretched out film of water. Cleaning is about how it interacts with oil and dirt. But if something doesnāt foam when we use it, we tend to feel it isnāt cleaning well. Itās just a psychological thing.
How well a shampoo cleans is complicated. Bottom line: Sulfate-free and sulfate-containing donāt really mean much. How well a shampoo cleans is too complicated to predict that easily.
Itās much more useful to look at what the shampoo is telling you. If it says āclarifyingā itās a shampoo designed to clean your hair better, if it says ācolour protectionā, it can have sulfates and still strip dye less. Itās also really useful to look at reviews from people with similar hair to you and try a sample before buying.
Thank you, I appreciate that. Setting crunchy and then breaking it makes sense. I have limited mobility and energy so Iāve been putting my damp hair in the dressing-gown-rope-style hair band thingy. If I leave it over night to dry like that (with a satin turban) it looks really nice for a day but then drops out without a holding product. If I leave it for over 36hours it looks like Iāve permed it for two days and then looks gorgeous until I wash it again. Iād like to find a nice medium between the poodle perm and the lovely curls that only last a day - maybe over night hairband with a holding cream, then breaking up the crunchy is the answer!