
Originally Posted by
Tock
There are a few different types of hair wax products . . . some use wax and some use sugar. I had my eyebrows done once with a wax-based product, and when they ripped the fabric thingy off, it took a layer of skin off along with the hair. Took a few weeks to heal up . . . ugh . . . The deal with that stuff is that you're supposed to use a few pre-application products before you apply the wax. There's a skin-cleaner, then another liquid that's supposed to make the wax stick only to the hair and not the skin. Of course, I didn't learn about this until after my accident . . .
I whipped up a batch of sugar-based hair remover at home (lots of recipes available on the net--Google under "sugaring"), and it worked ok on my arms & chest.
As far as professional waxing goes -- they use the same stuff you get at WalMart, or the same sugar stuff anyone can make at home. The trick is in the application, and hopefully your skin isn't so sensitive that it'll react negatively to the product or process.
As far as frequency goes -- supposedly, every time you yank a hair out of its follicule, you damage the mechanism that grows the hair a bit, and the hair grows out a little thinner each time. Wax enough times, and the hair should stop growing alltogether.
That's the theory, anyway.
Me, I just use the clippers. Less muss, less fuss. If I'm gonna yank anything, it won't be a clump of hair . . .
-Tock