whats the differnance between the chi and other flat irons
I am so excited to hear good things about this.I wanted to buy one, but they aren't cheap. So, I wanted to make sure they were worth the money first. It sounds like they definately are.....Thanks for helping me make my decision.
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I almost did this for DD last christmas but ended up getting some other item(not a flat iron) But I'm wondering too. The ones they had at the beauty supply place were still pricey, just not as much as the chi. And they were ceramic or some other material...maybe tourmalene or something like that.I bought the generic chi from Sally's Beauty Supply. I love it and it was not as much as the chi. I wonder if there is a difference....
I bought the generic chi from Sally's Beauty Supply. I love it and it was not as much as the chi. I wonder if there is a difference....
I am thinking about buying a Chi flat iron and I just wondered if anyone had one. Do you like it? Is it worth the money?
So do you think the ones they sell at Sally's Beauty are on par with a Chi?The basics of a flat iron are plates, thermostat, heating element and hardware.
Ceramic plates are a significant upgrade from metal plates - but metal plates (cheap Target flat irons) will work for a lot of people. You want a decent quality thermostat and a heating element that heats evenly. You want hardware that isn't going to break in a year.
There is also a width difference - wider widths are pricier, but narrow widths are better for shorter hair.
If you have fairly fine straight hair to start with, you need "less" flat iron than if you start with thick curly hair.
I don't have a Chi and like my ceramic plate flat iron just fine - but I start with fairly short fine hair with some wave in it - I'm not trying to iron down 32 inches of thick curls.
do i need a 2 inch one or 1 inch