I'll never forget the first time I saw Mocha Girl One (HmG) . She was an emergency c-section, and had to spend several days in NICU. She was born four days past her estimated due date and looked huge in her incubator. I imagined her to be especially delicate and feminine. I couldn't wait to frill her up, and more importantly to do her hair ! The only reason she wasn't sporting a barrette the day we took her home from the hospital, was because the one I brought to match her lacey outfit, slid right out. Mocha Girl One's baby hair was silky straight and fine. As the weeks rolled by, it became wavier until she had a lovely curly fro. I washed it all the time . I brushed it several times a day . I tried snap clips, and moved to velcro barrets when the clips slid out. I bought a different head band for every outfit. Meanwhile her curls continued to wind tighter and tighter. I kept everything in a pretty box, dubbed the hair bin . I was really frustrated at not b...
Growing in treasuring my girls, and sharing what I am learning along the way.
I love this idea and my daughter would go crazy for it. Now that you've had some experience, does the wig you chose have enough hold for styles? (We too have the experience of my daughter trying to make twists stay in silky doll hair!). Also, does the wig hair stay manageable after some use? Thanks so much for the tips!
ReplyDeleteThe wigs works well enough. What do you mean by manageable? I try to store them away in their bags when we are not using them. My next lesson with my girls will be on detangling. The wigs are synthetic hair so we will see how well they can deangle them.
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