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Report from the hair-henna front

God, work today is horrible. I hope I get to go home tonight with enough time to henna my hair.

In any case — I checked up on the green goop this morning, and added the tea tree oil to the mix I was reserving for terps. The lemon mixes and yogurt mix oxidized beautifully. The yogurt mix looks like it has by far the silkiest texture. I couldn’t tell how well the chamomile and coffee mixes oxidized. The coffee I brewed was so black that it was pretty dark when I set it out last night, and so even this morning it was a pretty solid color straight through. The chamomile was slightly lighter green in the middle, but it might have just been a trick of the light. There was a little yellowish seepage from the chamomile — exciting, because that might indicate its power to dye hair yellowish.

Since I couldn’t tell how the coffee/tea mixes were doing, I left them all out instead of popping them in the fridge for the 10 hours I’m at work to keep it fresh. I figured it needs all the help it can get.

Hopefully I’ll have a fresh report tomorrow of how it worked on my hair… but I totally doubt I’m going to get home before 10 p.m. God. I need to get better at this henna thing so I can market myself and not be chained to a PC for 10+ hours a day.

Ankle & Moroccan

I don’t think I ever posted my ankle experiment. I did my ankle in an easy floral design from my old Earth Henna kit, taking an extra effort to use fine, crisp lines.

Ankle

To ensure that it dried properly, I utilized my handy-dandy blowdrier. I sealed it with watered-down glue, applied with one of those little Crayola paintbrushes from their standard kids’ watercolor sets (I have two, so I had a brush to spare). I then blowdried this, and applied another layer or two of the glue. This seemed to be pretty thoroughly sealed, so I went searching in the sock drawer for something I could claim for overnight henna use. Lo and behold, my boyfriend had some loose, unfortunately-colored socks left over from a horrible job uniform that I could use and ruin with abandon! So I skipped the saran wrap in the hopes of stalling any possible henna bleed and socked myself instead.

This was by far the easiest henna removal yet. All I had to do was scrape at the edges of the glue in the morning, and the entire thing peeled off like a bad price tag, leaving a pretty orange stain behind.

I am so sealing my next design the same way!

In other news, I got my right hand professionally henna’d at the Reno Rib Cookoff by Renu of hennadesigns.com:

Moroccan

That cool neclace I got at the cookoff as well. :)

She was so fast! She applied with a jaq bottle. I was particularly interested in the way she sealed it. Her mix was lemon juice, sugar, and honey, but she applied it with a little dowel wrapped with cotton at one end. The dowel was probably five or six inches long and maybe a quarter-inch or less in diameter. She would just whip it out of the jar of sealer and roll it over the design. It was quick and painless, and I bet it would work with watered-down glue. The lemon-sugar-honey mix sealed it fabulously, but it was hell to get off. I picked at it and picked at it and it just kept sticking. I rubbed at it with vegetable oil and it just kept sticking. So I gave up and washed it off with water. That hasn’t seemed to affect the stain too much, though.

It’s by far my favorite design that’s currently on my skin. The lines are fine, the geometry is gorgeous, and I just love the cuff style! It peeks out from the longish sleeves I like to wear. The color of her henna is nice, too.

I’m trying to scrub off the coverup henna on my left hand. If it goes away any time soon, I might try to emulate my right hand design on my left hand. Those Moroccan designs — they’re just coolio! :)

Magic Brew

I’m conducting a hair henna experiment.

There are those that say that adding coffee to your hair henna makes it
browner; that chamomile makes it more blonde, that yogurt makes it
condition more. We’ll see.

Brew_1

My control will be plain henna with lemon juice.

My mixes will be:

  • Henna and coffee (Sarkisan chocolate macadamia, specifically)
  • Henna and chamomile (Stash brand because Whole Foods was out of loose leaf)
  • Henna and yogurt (Horizon whole-fat plain)
  • Henna, lemon juice, and tea tree oil
 

The tea and coffee I brewed double strength. Coffee was made in a
french press with 4 tablespoons coffe per 8 oz water. Chamomile was 2
bags per 8 oz. Each batch will be made with 1 tablespoon (about 5
grams) of henna.

I’m off to mix it up. Application is
scheduled for tomorrow (on five segments of the under-layer of hair on
my head). Photos should be ready by the weekend.

To the lab!

Fudging and Oxidation

Alrighty! Now to post the follow-up.

I left the paste on all night and took it off in the morning. Here are the results:

Footnopaste
Handsmudge

As you can see, my pretty hand design was totally ruined because I
didn’t wait for it to dry before sealing it, and I fudged the hell out
of it! :(
My foot looked pretty good though. Interesting thing about henna: Right
after you take off the paste, it’s bright orange. After you let it
oxidize for a day or two, it starts to look like this:

Footday1

God, I love how my foot turned out. I’m starting to have this trend of
messing my hand up, though. I tried going over that big blotchy mess to
make it look nicer, but it’s just … awkward. Yuck.

Coverup

And now you all know what a fabulous color my carpet is, too!

I
figured out how to describe the texture of this batch of henna. Slimy.
Even after letting my hand dry for four hours, it was still all goopy
and stuff. When I go to remove the paste, it isn’t a tidy little mess
of dried-up henna goobers. It’s a coating of slime that’s nearly
impossible to get off! Definately less sugar in the next batch — I’m
almost positive that’s the culprit.

Also, I’m thinking about
nixing the saran wrap for when I leave this stuff on overnight. If you
don’t put plenty of layers of an absobant material over your henna
before saran wrapping, you end up with a steamy little sauna and what
I’m starting to think of as henna bleed. At least, that’s my theory.
(Remember, I’m not very good at this yet!) Unless you’ve sealed the
henna really well with watered-down Elmers, or covered it pretty
thoroughly with a wickable material, I bet that the sweat and moisture
from the saran wrap sauna makes the henna flatten out, just like a bad
batch of cookies.

Either that, or I just wasn’t being as
delicate as I thought I was. It could also be the sliminess of the
henna that contributed to that.

Oh well — it’s not going to
keep me from doing my ankle tonight! I’m going to seal with that
watered-down Elmers I was talking about earlier. The back of the bottle
says "doesn’t run or drip; dries clear; safe, non-toxic; flexible when
dry." A Henna Tribe
person mentioned that it makes it nearly indestructable while on, and
easy to remove. Just peel up the ends of the glue and peel it off,
henna and all! (Though that may not work with the Slime Batch. We’ll
see. Hopefully it will, however, stop the henna bleed.)

Henna Success!

So it didn’t go perfectly, but it went pretty well, in my opinion.

I didn’t get my EOs in the mail, so I added ground cinammon and
allspice to the mix so it would smell good. Nice combo! Completely took
out the "moldy lemonade stand" motif.

Some things I’m gonig to fix my next time around:

  • WAY less sugar. I used equal gram weights of sugar and henna
    powder… I’m thinking using half or a third as much sugar as henna
    powder. I don’t know how to describe the results. Whenever I wanted a
    line to end, it wouldn’t, because the end would refuse to leave the
    cone.
  • If I add cinnamon and allspice, I need to either get it
    powdered, cook it into a liquid to add, or strain my paste before using
    it. I had a slight clogging problem with those added in.
  • Gotta
    remember to wait until it’s dry before putting the lemon juice/sugar
    mix on to set it! I totally smooshed my nice, delicate hand henna with
    the lemony cotton ball.
  • I’m totally using an Elmer’s glue mix to
    set it next time, not the lemon juice/sugar with a coating of New Skin.
    That stuff totally stinks. I guess, alternately, I could just apply the
    New Skin outside instead of in the kitchen…
  • If I do apply New
    Skin outside instead of in the kitchen, I need to remember to do it
    after the lemony sugar skin dries, too. Or else it ends up running,
    then crystalizing, then being sticky.
  • And lastly, maybe I’ll make a smaller batch. I ended up with five cones, lol.

Now, onto the photos! I took these before setting the paste. None of these come directly from a pattern book, btw.

Left_top

My left foot.

Hand

My fun hand henna that I squished with my lemony sugar ball after taking this photo.

Right_1

A design I tried to do on the outside of my left ankle. It looks narsty
because, well, it’s really, really hard to see the outside of your
ankle. Either that or I haven’t been doing enough yoga. Anyway, yuck.

So tomorrow I get to scrape the paste off, and it should be a nice dark
color by Saturday or Sunday, if I’m lucky, and my tea tree oil did what
it’s supposed to do!

Now, I’m off to wrap these babies and
stick ‘em under a heating pad. In true fog city fashion, my apartment
is freezing. Not good for henna.

Recipe for Evil

Yes! It came, it came! My henna mail came!

I mixed it up
tonight. 20g henna, 3 T lemon juice, 20g table sugar, and about 8 drops
tea tree oil. (I only meant to use 6 or 7 drops, but it just dripped so
fast…) Mash it all up in a ziploc baggie, put it in the fridge on a
paper towel, and hopefully I won’t have dye release until tomorrow
afternoon. Then I can henna all night long — yay!

This is
perfect. If I did everything right, then the design will be fully
oxidized in all its glory just in time for the rib cookoff in Reno.

I hope my essential oils come in the mail tomorrow. They smell nice. If
they don’t, I’m probably going to add ground clove and allspice to the
mix so it doesn’t smell like a moldy lemonade stand, lol. Which reminds
me — I need to get manly-smelling essential oils. I only got
girly-smelling ones.

Stay tuned for photos. And look out,
because after this… I’m planning on doing my hair! (Cue supervillian,
end-of-the-world chuckling.)

Henna

This is my new thing:


(image from the Henna Page)

No, not moldy crack. It’s henna! Properly applied, it should look something like this:


(image from the Henna Page)

The first time I did henna on myself, last Christmas, it turned out like this:

The stain was pretty dark, but the lines? Terribly chunky. And I also
didn’t realize that, should one henna one’s fingernails, it doesn’t
fade. Took six months for my nails to finally grow out, and for me to
stop getting horrified looks from people that assumed I’d been horribly
burned in a freak accident.

That was using a kit I bought from the Earth Henna Web site. (This Web site is cool because of their photos of naked henna chicks.) Now, armed with information — and samples! — from The Henna Page, I’m ready to try again.

The keys, apparently, are Mylar (the stuff shiny baloons are made out
of — as well as oven mits, space suits, and those crinkly emergency
blankets) and dextrose. If you roll a Mylar fattie — er, cone — and
fill it with henna, you can razor off the tip of the cone to make as
thick or thin of a line as you need. The dextrose is just corn sugar, a
monosaccharide that makes the henna more pliable and easier to apply.
Plain old table sugar works too, but "dextrose" sounds way more mad
scientist.

I think the first time I saw henna was on my Indian
coworker after she came back from visiting her husband and family. She
was hands-down one of the sweetest people I’ve ever met. Even though
the henna on her palms had faded to a burnt orange color by the time
she returned to work, it was still beautiful!

The second time
I saw henna was in Morocco. Morocco, Orlando — as in, the Epcot Center
Morocco, at a little kiosk across from a restaurant that usually had a
guy in a Genie costume from Disney’s Aladdin hanging around. The henna
artist looked terribly bored, probably because she was sick of doing
henna "tatoos" of butterflies and flowers on pre-teen girls’ midrifts.
She did my hand and arm for me, but it didn’t turn out too well,
because I immediately started picking at it, instead of letting it set
for the 4-8 hours it usually needs.

This time around, when I
get my new stuff in the mail, I want to do my feet and legs in nifty,
yoga-inspired patterns. That way I’ll have something to cheer me up
when I go back to doing yoga again, and I’m sitting there trying to get
my index fingers around my big toes and failing miserably.

Ooh, ooh, I know — I’ll do a Japanese theme, and do "ganbare" on my toes. LOL.

Anyway, if you’re a geek like me, you should totally read up on henna at The Henna Page.
It talks about the culture and history behind henna over many cultures,
India and Africa being two big ones. It talks about the chemistry of
henna, and how certain ingredients react with the powder to release its
dye. Naturally, it gives you plenty of step-by-step henna how-tos, and
lots of patterns you can use. And it even has some of that Myth Busters
trial-and-error element, because the author of the page has tested mix
after mix of henna ingredients, disproving the effects of some and
creating whole new recipes using others.

So, that’s my new "thing." I’ll let you know how it turns out!