Train your hair to lay down at any stage.
you wolf to challenge yourself to maintain your waves at any stage. This deepens the waves so that your waves are not only visibly seen on the first layer but wavy underneath the first layer. It’s important not to get a haircut through this journey because you want to train your hair to lay down without cutting hair off. Just manage it with lineups, tapers, and free hand trims. If you consistently take care of the basics of getting waves through the process you can maintain it. Just like swimming you start on the low end then progress to the deep end once you learn to swim.
Better your waves.
The wolf doesn’t necessarily have to be long all the time. it just need to be enough to make improvements. To better your connections and deepness in your waves you need to wolf because you have hair to work with then. My wolf is typically 7 days. Every 7 days that’s a complete week of wolfing. You want to keep up with how many weeks you wolf because if you don’t then your hair can get unmanageable especially if it grows fast. Also your hair texture and factors of your natural hair play a part in how long you should wolf. Wolfing betters your waves because you have hair to work with to train to be better.
Promote hair growth. if you want your hair to grow don’t cut it so often. Waves are seen as a low cut style but 360 waves really takes curls that are not laid down but trained to be laid down through constant brushing and compressing. It’s basically an curly afro laid down. If you want to train and better your waves you have to turn that fro into waves through brushing, wearing compression and taking care of your hair if not then your hair will be unmanageable.
***Wolfing is usually done when it’s cool in the winter months but if you can learn to manage it you can wolf at any stage. But don’t over-wolf if you hair is not trained that can be worser than not wolfing at all for your waves***
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