QuoteReplyTopic: shrinkies?? Posted: March 25 2005 at 2:34pm
ok, I use to work for a few months at a plastic making plant - they make tubes for toothpaste...everything actually that comes in a tube...maybe I will go visit them on monday...back to the shrinkies, I think that there is a good chance that the "shrinkies" are just the cut off pieces that the company does not need. - which could explain the differences of glue,shrinking....lets say they have a order for 1/8 inch clear tubing 6 inches long, well the machine is set at six inches and then the plastic is fed in and trimmed down. I have tried the over the counter stuff and ordered tubing with glue in it - doesn't quite work the way it should.
Besides HairCandy and Doc's what is the other company that you can get them from?
I will let you know on Monday what they say at the tubing plant.
Octavia
Faces of Pain - One woman's Journey with Chronic Pain
www.octavaia@got-to-have-art.com
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I know International Wig sells shrinkies too, as well as a few overseas sites and eBay sellers.
This was already mentioned on another thread, but I'm also totally
convinced that shrinkies are not manufactured for hair use--not that
this means it's a bad product for hair, but I don't think it was
intended for this purpose at all.
A few months ago, I saw a container of "shrinkies" that someone had
gotten from a company in China (whether it was a hair company or
plastics company, I don't know). They looked exactly like the ones I
had from Doc's, they were adhesive lined, and the whole container
supposedly cost $5--there were hundreds of them in there. Now, I never
did any testing with these, but I can tell you that they were
indistinguishable from Doc's based on look and feel. If I find out the
name of this company, I will let you know though.
According to Doc's site, hers are coated with keratin glue (not that
means anything to me, because I don't think keratin glue is any more
gentle than anything else really); I also think the term "keratin" is
used pretty liberally to describe lots of glues these days--basically
anything whose base is protein, which is, after all, the basis of many
glues. It's a pretty circular argument, really.
Anyway, I'll be curious to hear your findings, Octavia!
I believe that the shrinkies are not especially made for hair extension installation and that's why they work sometimes and don't work other times.
I know if doensn't help the DIYer, since they can't buy MB shrink links, but I can tell you that I know for certain that they diligently tested their shrink links to make certain it would work every time for hair extension applications.
MB used to be an engineer who worked in the plastics field before he found his true calling and became a hair dresser and eventually invented the shrink link process.
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