How to Do a Silk Wrap Posted: 08 Dec 2021 04:00 PM PST If you have natural or relaxed hair, a silk wrap can help your hair look soft, smooth, and straight. It may be surprising to put your hair up into plastic wrap, but with a little bit of moisture and heat, it can make a big difference. If you've been wanting your straightened hair to feel softer and smoother, a silk wrap may be the way to go. In no time, you'll have the skills you need to try this long-lasting technique for yourself. [Edit]Brushing Your Hair into a Wrap - Straighten your hair however works for you. Before you can begin a silk wrap, your hair has to be straight. You can use a flat iron, rollers, or even get a blow-out at a salon. There is no need to switch things up for a silk wrap, so stick to whatever is most comfortable for you.
- Work a dime-size amount of a light moisturizer into your hair. Run the moisturizer all throughout your hair, focusing on the ends and staying away from the roots. You can use your palms to squeeze the moisturizer, working it through all of your curls. The moisturizer will help make wrapping your hair much easier.
- If your hair is wet, dry it thoroughly before beginning to moisturize your hair.
- Rub your palms together to emulsify the moisturizer for a smoother feeling.
- Flip your hair over with your head down. Lean forward and comb your hair down.[1] You can use a comb to make a straight part down the middle of your hair, from your forehead to the back of your head, to make it easier to flip it down. Your hair should hang over your forehead as you brush it out.[2]
- Use a brush to wrap your hair around your head, clipping as you go. You can wrap the left side of your part clockwise and your left side counter-clockwise. Your hair should wrap all the way around your head, with clips holding the ends in place.[3][4]
- Use flat hair clips or bobby pins to keep your wrap from creasing.
[Edit]Covering Your Hair in Plastic Wrap - Fold the end of a piece of plastic wrap into a triangle. To begin the silk wrap, the end of the plastic needs to be folded down at each corner to form a triangle shape. This will allow you to start at a more precise point, rather than beginning with a thin single layer.[5]
- You don't need to cut the plastic wrap from the roll until the very end.
- You only need to do this at the very beginning, as the rest of the layers will rest on top of the first.
- Wrap the plastic around your head once. Press the plastic wrap triangle against the back of your head and pull the roll around your head, letting the plastic cover your forehead. Cover your hair tightly enough that it grips itself, but not uncomfortably tight. The tip of the triangle should be right in the middle of your head, right where it meets your neck.[6]
- The first wrap should be the lowest, so it's okay for it to cover up your forehead a bit.
- Twist the plastic wrap before beginning a second wrap.[7]
- Continue to wrap all of your hair, twisting before each wrap. Keep pulling the roll around your head, covering new areas with each loop. You'll know that you have fully wrapped your hair when none of it is exposed outside of the wrap. Be sure to feel the very top of your head to check that it's been covered
- In order to make sure you cover all of your hair, work your way up a little bit with each wrap.
- Tear the wrap from the roll, or use scissors to trim it off. Once your head has been fully covered, you can pull the roll away to break off the wrap, or take a pair of scissors to the plastic, right where the wrapped sheet meets the roll.[8]
- Just like when you cover a dish with aluminum foil or plastic wrap, the tear or cut should leave enough for you to press the covering back down onto itself.
[Edit]Drying and Removing the Wrap - Sit under a hooded heater set to medium heat for 10 to 20 minutes. Set the heater between medium and high and let it dry out your wrapped hair. Be careful not to sit too close to the heater, or you will risk burning the plastic or worse, your hair and scalp. Avoid sitting under the heater for more than 20 minutes.
- Don't let the heater go above , as this may cause damage to your hair.[9]
- If you don't have access to a hooded heater, you can try using a standard blow dryer on its highest setting to help set the silk wrap. Just move the blow dryer around to hit every part of your head, circling for roughly 15 minutes.
- Unwrap the plastic and remove the clips. Grab the top of the plastic wrap and unwind it around your hair, making sure you don't accidentally tear off any hair with the plastic. Then, you can snap off all of the clips you've used in your wrap and set them aside.
- Let the clips cool before removing them if they are made of metal.
- Brush out your hair. Use a thick-bristle hair brush to undo the wrap style and return your hair to a simple straightened look.[10] It may take a few brushes in each region of your hair to get it back to how it looked before the wrap. The silk wrap will have made your much softer and easier to brush without catching, so don't worry about tearing.
- Re-do the wrap after 2 weeks. A silk wrap can last up to 2 weeks, keeping your hair silky, smooth, and straight. After 2 weeks, you will need to put it up and dry it again to maintain these effects. If you notice that your hair is not responding well to the wrap, try going to a salon or waiting longer between wraps.[11]
- Your hair will revert as soon as it gets wet, so be sure to put your hair up in a wrap when working out, showering, or sleeping.
[Edit]Things You'll Need - Hair moisturizer
- Hair clips
- A roll of plastic cling wrap
- Hooded heater
- Curlers (optional)
- Flat iron straightener (optional)
- Blow dryer (optional)
[Edit]References |
How to Fix a Cassette Tape Posted: 08 Dec 2021 08:00 AM PST Old audio cassette tapes can run into a number of problems that call for some cassette tape surgery. For example, the tape might tear and break, requiring you to splice it back together. Another common issue is for the tape to come unraveled from one of the wheel hubs, in which case you can splice it to the end of the tape on a new wheel hub from a blank cassette tape. Either way, you can get the job done with a few simple tools and a delicate touch! [Edit]Disassembling a Cassette Tape - Unscrew the cassette case, if it has screws, using a small Phillips screwdriver. Use a tiny Phillips-head screwdriver to remove the screws in the two top corners of the cassette tape. Set the screws aside somewhere where you won't lose them, such as in a small dish or cup.[1]
- If you don't see any screws, your cassette is the type that is glued together.
- Issues that you will need to take a cassette tape apart to fix include a ripped or broken tape and a tape that has come off one of the wheel hubs.
- Pry the cassette apart using a tiny flathead screwdriver, if it is glued together. Insert the edge of the flathead screwdriver into the crack where the front and back pieces of the case are glued together on one side of the cassette. Work it back and forth in a lever motion along the crack to gently break the two halves apart.[2]
- If you can't pry the cassette case apart with your hands after separating the halves on one side, repeat the process with the screwdriver for the other sides of the cassette until you can pull them apart.
- Open the cassette tape horizontally so the spools don't fall out. Place the tape horizontally on a flat surface before you open it up. Pull the top half off and try to leave the bottom half flat on your work surface.[3]
- This will keep the wheel hubs in place so you don't accidentally drop them out and cause more damage to the tape.
[Edit]Splicing a Broken Tape - Use small, sharp scissors to cut off the damaged ends of the broken tape. Put the two halves of the cassette tape flat on the cutting board with the insides facing up at you. Be careful not to uncoil the tape from the wheel hubs.[4] Carefully trim off as little of the tape as possible, so you are only removing the damaged parts of the tape where it ripped and broke. This will allow you to tape the two pieces neatly back together.[5]
- If you don't have a pair of small, sharp scissors, you can carefully cut the damaged ends off using a boxcutter or utility knife and your cutting board.
- Depending how much damaged tape you have to cut off, there could be a noticeable skip in the audio of the tape after you splice it back together.
- Tape one end of the broken tape down on the cutting board. Straighten out one of the sides of the broken tape flat against the cutting board and carefully tape it down. Leave the end you trimmed exposed.[6]
- Make sure that the broken end of the tape is completely flat and not curling at all, so that it is easy to work with when you're splicing the other broken end to it.
- Use cellophane tape to splice the two sides of the cassette's tape together. Carefully line up the end of the other side of the broken tape with the end of the side you just taped down. Press a piece of cellophane tape down over them to splice them together.[7]
- The spliced pieces will be held down on the cutting board by the cellophane tape at this point.
- Peel up the cellophane tape and flip the cassette's tape over on the cutting board. Use your fingernails to gently peel the cellophane tape up from the cutting board, being careful not to unsplice the two halves of the cassette's tape that you just stuck together. Flip over the tape so you can splice together the other side.[8]
- The sticky side of the cellophane tape and the side of the cassette's tape that has no cellophane tape on it should now be facing upwards towards you.
- Put a piece of cellophane tape on the other side of spliced tape. Double-check to make sure the ends of the broken tape are still lined up and stuck together. Carefully stick a new piece of cellophane tape over the exposed sides of the cassette's tape to finish splicing the broken ends together.[9]
- This should hold the broken tape securely together and limit the chances of it coming undone in the future.
- Trim the excess cellophane tape off using a boxcutter or utility knife. Hold the tape flat against the cutting board. Carefully trim the excess cellophane tape that is hanging off the sides of the spliced tape, right up to the edge of the tape.[10]
- You can now put the cassette tape back together.
[Edit]Putting a Tape Back on the Wheel Hub - Buy a new blank cassette tape to use for parts and open it up. Purchase a blank cassette that is held together by screws. Unscrew it using a Phillips screwdriver and take it apart, just like you did for the cassette tape you want to fix.[11]
- If you have a cassette tape that has come off one of the hubs, it is very difficult to reattach it to the same hub. Using a new wheel tape from a blank cassette that already has tape attached to it will allow you to splice the old tape to it to attach it to a new hub more easily.
- Cut the new cassette's tape from the end of the tape. The plastic, non-magnetic end of the tape that secures the magnetic tape to the wheel hub is called the leader tape. Remove the spool that has the leader tape exposed from the cassette and cut the tape from the end of the leader tape using small, sharp scissors.[12]
- This will give you a new spool with a clean-cut piece of tape to splice the tape from your old cassette to, so that it is attached to the new wheel hub.
- Remove the wheel hubs from your old cassette. Lift out the empty wheel hub and throw it away. Take out the wheel hub that has the tape spooled around it and set it down in front of you.[13]
- It's best to do this on a cutting board on a flat work surface in front of you.
- Splice the tape from the new wheel hub to the tape on the old hub. Line up the cut end of the new blank tape with the end of the tape from your old cassette. Tape them carefully together using cellophane tape.[14]
- See the above method for complete instructions on how to splice cassette tape together.
- Place the wheel hub back in the cassette case. Carefully put each wheel hub back into the old cassette so that the holes in the middles of the hubs line up with the holes in the cassette case. Use a pencil to wind the wheel hubs so the tape is not loose and all over the place.[15]
- You can now reassemble the cassette tape.
[Edit]Reassembling a Cassette Tape - Line up the tape with the rollers and pressure pad at the top of the cassette case. Make sure the tape is spooled tightly so it is straight and flat at the top. Place the tape over the rollers that are located in each of the top corners. Put the tape underneath the pressure pad, which is in the center of the top of the cassette.[16]
- Screw the cassette case together if it has screws. Snap the two halves of the cassette case back together and place the tiny screws back in the holes in the corners of the case. Use a small Phillips screwdriver to tighten them all the way.[17]
- Glue the cassette case together if it doesn't have screws. Put a small dot of superglue in each corner on the edge of one half of the cassette case. Snap the two halves of the case together and hold them together for 30 seconds.[18]
- It's best not to glue all the way around the cassette tape, just in case you have to take it apart again in the future.
- If the damaged cassette tape you want to fix is very important to you, let a professional tape repair and restoration service fix it for you to ensure the best results.
[Edit]Warnings - If you have a cassette tape with all the tape pulled out and tangled, unfortunately, you won't be able to fix it.
- Be careful not to let the tape spools drop out when you open up a cassette tape. You could end up causing more damage to the tape.
[Edit]Things You'll Need [Edit]Disassembling a Cassette Tape - Phillips screwdriver or flathead screwdriver
[Edit]Splicing a Broken Tape - Cutting board
- Cellophane tape
- Small scissors
- Boxcutter or utility knife
[Edit]Putting a Tape Back on the Wheel Hub - New blank cassette tape
- Cutting board
- Cellophane tape
- Small scissors
- Boxcutter or utility knife
- Pencil
[Edit]Reassembling a Cassette Tape - Phillips screwdriver (optional)
- Super glue (optional)
[Edit]References |
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