*How to Plop Curly Hair*
It couldn't be any more obvious, before this second in time, I—like each other long-haired human I knew—dried my hair by bending it in a towel on my head. In any case, what I didn't understand was that by wrapping my hair (once more, as for all intents and purposes all individuals do), my twists were getting loosened up (from the curving) and bunched up (from the nubby material). The outcome? Uh, the hair I had been utilized to as long as I can remember—which, as I discovered in the wake of thudding just because, was fantastically unremarkable.
Since not at all like with the ol' towel-and-contort strategy, thudding is a method that utilizes a T-shirt to dry your twists in an independent hill on top of your head, leaving them smooth, sans frizz, and incredibly voluminous. The strategy originates from the regular hair network, where ladies of shading have been thudding their curls for quite a long time. What's more, presently, on account of the interwebs, every wavy young lady can get super incredible hair, as well. In this way, right away…
*How to Plop Your Curls step by step :
Get yourself a major T-shirt. The informal most loved pick of the web? A XXL long-sleeve cotton T-shirt (I have this exemplary Soffe Men's Shirt for the low, low cost of $8. Whatsapp).
2. Before you bounce in the shower, lay your T-shirt topsy turvy—for example with the sleeves end nearest to you—on either your washroom counter, a seat, or, when there's no other option, on head of your latrine top (hello, it's everything for the sake of good hair, OK?).
3. Subsequent to showering, flip your sopping-wet hair over and onto the focal point of the T-shirt. With your head/hair still topsy turvy, get and lay the base of the shirt over your head (so it's contacting the scruff of your neck and totally covering your hair).
4. Handle the sleeves (close to your temple) and the rear of the shirt (at the scruff of your neck) and contort them together to fix the odd hair diaper around your head.
5. Fold the turned sleeves over your head and bind them set up to shield the shirt from sliding or tumbling off. On the off chance that you seem as though you're wearing a type of wet protective cap, at that point well done—you did it accurately.
Now, the entirety of your twists will be completely settled on the head of your head—practically like a lot of compacted Slinkies—permitting them to dry in their normal development, immaculate by gravity, moistness, or the unpleasantness of a towel. Which implies when you open up the shirt (I as a rule hold up a decent 20 minutes before taking it off), your twists will have just begun to dry with better definition and volume, with no of the frizz. Enchanted, isn't that so?

