Coolpiece Coolpiece
Saturday, 19 July 2008
Coolpiece
Main Menu
Home
Articles
Photographs
Search
Contact Us
Shop Online
Online Payment Form
Shop Accessories
Order Form Guidelines and Instructions
New Order Form
Ready Made Stock Units
Sale

View Cart / Checkout
FAQ's
General
Service, Security, Policies, Repairs etc.
Base Design
Hair and Knots
Density
Hairstyle and Direction
Curl and Wave
Attachment
Removal
Cleaning
Coloring
Haircut
Adhesives and Accessories
Home arrow Adhesives and Accessories arrow Please describe the materials!

Please describe the materials! PDF Print E-mail
  • French Lace is a barely visible polyester knitted material into which hair is knotted and the knots are bleached. Available in pink or yellow. Can be made brown upon special request.
  • Extra Fine Swiss Lace is the least visible lace, easier to tear than French lace. A knitted polyester, it comes in many colors. (see above for a revised opinion of Swiss lace)
  • 3# monofilament is a hard to see, strong unwelded nylon fine knit that can be used anywhere except at an edge. Available in many colors.
  • 0.12 monofilament, a strong lace alternative, is a woven and welded nylon mesh, similar to lace. Very strong and can be used at an edge. Available in many colors.
  • Polyskin is polyurethane available in various thicknesses from the extremely thin Polyskin 3 to a substantial edging material. It is non-porous and comes in many colors.
  • Poly-with-gauze is an untearable polyurethane edging material that is reasonably undetectable. Available in many colors.
  • Poly coating is a thicker and less popular alternative to poly-with-gauze but is better than poly-with-gauze if used on 0.12 mono. Available in many colors.
  • Injected polyskin is a multi-layer polyurethane that sandwiches in the ends of injected hairs without knotting. Starting in 2007, a new technique allows us to make these with a much thinner base than ever before, so for the first time, the front hairline edge will disappear sufficiently to be considered quite undetectable. This base method is still the best base for virgin hair (which the client supplies himself) that has the cuticle intact. Upon magnified close inspection, the slight bend at the "root" of each hair can spoil the illusion with these bases.

 

 
Next >