Untangling where your hair extensions really come from from freemexy's blog
Untangling where your hair extensions really come from
Go
online in search of a wig or hair extensions and you'll be presented
with a dizzying spectrum of choices. "Luxury" virgin hair from Brazil or
Peru. "Pure" Mongolian hair. "Finest remy" hair from India. Sleek
European weaves. But very rarely will you see hair from China advertised
- even though that's where most of it is from.
China is the biggest
exporter and importer of human hair and harvests huge amounts from its
own population, as Emma Tarlo discovered on a three-year quest to
untangle what happens to hair once it is no longer attached to our
heads.Hair manufacturers
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"People who work in the industry are conscious of the fact Made in
China is viewed as a negative label and market it in more glamorous ways
instead," says the professor of anthropology and author of
Entanglement: The Secret Lives of Hair.Consult the many online hair
glossaries, blogs and tutorials and you'll be told that Chinese hair is
the coarsest, that Filipino hair is similar but much shinier, that
Brazilian hair is "full-bodied with a beautiful bounce" and Indian hair
is "versatile with a natural lustre". Definitions are as varied as they
are vague.
The more you try to make sense of it, the more elusive it
becomes," says Tarlo. "European hair is the most valuable, partly
because of its fine textures, the variety of its colours and because it
is in shorter supply." Most of this hair comes from countries in Eastern
Europe, such as Russia, Romania, or Ukraine.
At the top end of the
market is "virgin" hair - hair that has never been chemically treated -
and "remy" hair, which has been cut or shaved directly from a donor.
And then at the opposite end of the scale is "standard hair" - often
used as a more marketable term for comb waste. Yes, Chinese or
otherwise, many sleek and shiny hair extensions start life as hairballs,
collected from combs and plugholes.
Chinese factories will often
call the comb waste hair 'standard hair' because a lot of the hair comes
through that route," says Tarlo.
"In terms of marketing it's up to
the integrity of traders all the way along the line to specify what hair
is what. Quite a lot of mislabelling goes on and often the people
buying it don't ask questions anyway."
The Wall