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Very good hydrating conditioner/treatment + super cheap

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(@jacquelineh)
Noble Member Registered

I only put it on for a couple of minutes as I was in a hurry but my hair is so soft now πŸ˜€

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Posted : February 16, 2012 12:38 pm
(@laurac)
Honorable Member Registered

finally tracked some down today!!! been looking for ages!
gonna try it out in the next few days πŸ™‚

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Posted : March 10, 2012 11:38 pm
(@mootheblue)
New Member Guest

Got some on my online weekly shop at ASDA for 80p a bottle!  Good times.  Using it to undo my husbands 2 and 1/2 year old dreads! Bad times  πŸ™  although it is working a treat  πŸ˜‰

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Posted : March 11, 2012 12:51 am
(@pippachainsaw)
New Member Guest

i've  been using the wrong one all along! lolz. i've been using the regular conditioner, which is fab

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Posted : March 11, 2012 3:29 pm
(@laurac)
Honorable Member Registered

sounds like that conditioner you've been using would smell well nice though pippa! im going to buy a bottle of that anyway lol

Used it today after a bleach bath, left it on for around 30mins, hair feels lovely and soft, even the bleached part!

Moderator combined posts

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Posted : March 11, 2012 4:25 pm
(@Babe_Hawx)
New Member Guest

This stuff is blimmin amazing, I read this post so popped to asda with my 80p, got home, wet hair and smothered half of the surprisingly large tube on my hair as my hair is super thick, chronically dry and quite long, plopped it ontop of my head & I put a bag over my hair and wrapped a towel around for good measure.

2 hours later I rinsed it off and instantly I could feel how much softer and manageable my hair was, I squeezed gently to get rid of excess water, applied my bargain aldi frizz fighter serum,and just left it to air dry ( the whole 15 hours!!!)

My hair looks and feels so much less dry and damaged, the silly wiggly ends from my heat damage....gone, stiff hair that I couldn't brush .....gone, dull hair.....totally gone.....split ends....have only spotted a few ( I know it just stick them together probably but that's good enough for me) all in all my hair looks and feels great. I would have been happy if I'd been to the hair dressers and paid Β£20 for this result!

One slight warning though.... Don't use a white towel if your hair is anything other than blonde or white. I had no colour loss or rinse out of colour but it did dye my towel black and red where the bag must of slipped off a bit xxx

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Posted : March 13, 2012 3:07 pm
(@VioletJeff)
New Member Guest

I just went on a small hunt for this after reading the reviews, couldn't find it in Poundland, Savers or Home Bargains BUT in Superdrug it's currently on offer at Β£1.29 a bottle or 2 for Β£1.49, so I grabbed 2. Excited to try it πŸ˜€
I also bought a Charles Worthington leave in conditioner, can't decide which to use first!

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Posted : April 11, 2012 10:47 am
(@raspberry)
Trusted Member Registered

I'll keep a look out for this as my hair is super dry at the moment - stupid windy weather. I bought the K Pak intense hydrator which isn't doing too much for me :(. I will be slightly annoyed if I get better results with a much cheaper product though...

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Posted : April 11, 2012 10:31 pm
(@theodora)
New Member Guest

Seriously, if you told me a year ago when I was spending all my hard-earned dough on Redken/Kerastase/Moroccanoil/Philip Kingsley products that I would soon shun these to spend my time trolling pound shops for cheapy conditioners, I wouldn't have believed you. I actually profoundly despised people who owned Alberto Balsam product (that makes me sound horrible, but I just have a vague tendency for being a snob once in a while). It makes me laugh in retrospect.

Now I know about ingredients and read ingredients list, I realise that 99% of expensive products rely solely on silicones. They might boast having "caviar", "silk protein" or "argan oil", but they are mostly just water, some fatty alcohols and a heavy dose of silicones. Aside from protein treatments, for which I believe you need to invest good money as these actually require proper science, I think anyone would be better off buying cheap Β£1 conditioner with less ingredients and then adding maybe a spoonful of argan oil, or coconut oil, some aloe vera, some honey, maybe olive oil etc. This costs less and is far more effective than buying products which have very little of these ingredients they boast having. I know not everyone wants to play kitchen witch with their hair products, but really it's not too bad investing in a couple of good vegetable/nut oils, a jar of honey and a tub of aloe vera gel to play around with. The amount of different products you can achieve with these is actually great.

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Posted : April 11, 2012 11:06 pm
(@stormofdamnation)
Reputable Member Registered

Can I just say I *love* the phrase 'kitchen witch'. Perfectly sums up my proclivity for manic hair concoctions!

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Posted : April 11, 2012 11:30 pm
(@marthamagic)
Honorable Member Registered

Haha I love making potions and stuff for my hair, it reminds me of when I was little and I used to mix all bath products up to make 'potions'
I was a cool child.

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Posted : April 11, 2012 11:34 pm
(@pippachainsaw)
New Member Guest

i made perfume from water and old rose petals i found on the floor =s i was a gross child! lolz

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Posted : April 12, 2012 12:18 am
(@VioletJeff)
New Member Guest

I did that too! Haha, didn't really have a scent, funnily enough πŸ™

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Posted : April 14, 2012 10:44 am
(@Daftscrawl)
New Member Guest

I did both of those as well as mudpies in frisbees and ladybird nests.

I can't find this stuff anywhere, boo.

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Posted : April 15, 2012 8:59 pm
(@mcgvil)
New Member Guest

Picked up some of this today from superdrug along with their coconut and lychee conditioner (it smelled too nice from me to resist lol). Going to wash my hair tomorrow so i shall report back once i'm done πŸ™‚

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Posted : April 17, 2012 11:42 am
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