Recently, I visited the Sephora store and I don’t know how it all happened but I eventually went left with 3 huge cheques and a lot of purchases. This new hair scrub magically appeared among them.
A detoxifying shampoo that cleanses, purifies, and restores hair and scalp balance.
-Spread a small amount of the scrub evenly on damp hair.
-Massage gently from the scalp and along the hair length right down to the ends.
-Rinse thoroughly. One lather is just enough.
-Use the instant coconut mask (sold separately) as a complement to nourish hair.
About the price
The brand can be taken as a drugstore because this product costs $7 for 100g. Profitable, especially when I know that it goes a very long way.
About the packaging
It’s simple and frill-free. Soft plastic vial which doesn’t have carving for the top cap. I mean you’ll have to put the cap back and that’s all. Such packaging is absolutely travel-unfriendly, although it was sealed when new.
Even though the jar isn’t huge, I still have half of it left, although I’ve been using it for a month 1-2 times a week.
About the consistency and aroma
The product is a green-mint gel with plenty of huge salt crystals to it. The crystals have sharp ends.
The aroma is cosmetic and minty. It doesn’t stay on my hair after use.
About the results
The product is to be applied on my roots when I wash my hair with shampoo. But I don’t get how to do it. I mean, its consistency is thick and the salt crystals are huge. It lathers fantastically and cools my scalp.
By honestly, I can’t see any popping results from it. I mean my scalp is clean as well as hair. It’s voluminous, even flat iron it.
About the ethical aspect
This is where all the problems lie. The brand is on the blacklist of PETA.
The bottom line
The product is odd. It’s convenient as a scalp scrub. I also don’t get it as a clarifying shampoo. In a word, it’s weird, weird product, with weird results which I don’t actually need.
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