Not Your Average Detox

As summer rolls to a close, we say goodbye to sun-kissed hair and (sob), sunshine! Crown Hair believes looking after your hair in all seasons is crucial to happy hair – and knowing how makes all the difference. If you’re ready to detox post-silly season, we can help… your hair, of course!

Christophe Robin’s Sea Salt Scrub is a great place to start the detox process, and we’ll explain why. Your scalp needs care in the same way the rest of your skin does, and the key to healthy hair is a healthy scalp.

 

Scalp ScrubChristophe himself is a firm believer in a weekly detox scrub in order to cleanse the scalp from build up courtesy of dry shampoo, pollution, poorly rinsed shampoo and conditioner. His Sea Salt Scrub is designed to do just that, and helps restore order to sensitive or oily scalps.

Want the full detox therapy? After using the cleansing sea salt scrub, follow it up with conditioner on the ends, or add a spritz of Christophe’s Hair Finishing Lotion with Sage Vinegar. You can massage this into your scalp and then towel dry to remove excess.

 

Christophe Salt ScrubExtra Tips and Tidbits? For frequent users of dry shampoo (go on, raise your hand..), Christophe recommends avoiding sleeping with dry shampoo in your hair where possible. Why?

 

“When you sleep, your skin absorbs everything and needs to breathe. Dry shampoos suffocate the scalp and make it oily. It is important to wash those off very well!”

Did you know that Christophe’s Sea Salt scrub was the first scalp scrub on the market created to effectively remove colour pigment after colouring? Christophe noticed that in using this traditional method of colour removal and to soothe itchiness and irritation post colour, it worked to rebalance the scalp and as a detox essential.

Rinsing is key to keeping a happy scalp. Christophe explains, “..another trick to avoid oily roots is to rinse your hair thoroughly, we never rinse well enough. By not rinsing well, the products coat the scalp and make it greasy, which means you’ll have to wash it again, activating the production of sebum on your scalp”.