1. Unravel a section of braided hair (the braid actually helps and provides texture, especially if you have really straight hair to begin with)
2. Use a metal or sturdy plastic small toothed comb and start at the base teasing the hair. You want to really create a nice teased, almost ball at the base before you start ratting the rest.
3. Once you have a nice matted up section, use the crochet hook (any small size one will do)
and gently move it in and out of the dread pulling in any loose hairs.
4. Continue to tease (backcomb) hair and crochet until your dread is formed.
5. You can use palm rolling (rolling the hair back and forth in the palm of your hands) to mold it into shape.
6. When you get towards the bottom, if you want a blunted tip pull the crochet hook upwards into the dread.
Here is Dread #1
Although this dread is awesome and one of my favorites now, I freaked out a little with the length that I lost. More than 1/2 of my hair length was gone and I had some shorter layers in my hair that I worried would end up sticking up. Granted it was my first one and my husband spent almost 45 minutes making it perfect. I decided to sleep on it and see how I felt in the morning.
The next day I did some more research and found a few videos on the twist and pull method that seems to keep more length. Similar method, but instead of backcombing the entire strand up you:
1. Backcomb just the section at the base of your head.
2. Split the strand in 2 and cross it over one another.
3. Then pull the hair all the way up to tighten.
5. Use the crochet hook to get any lose or stray hairs .
Here is my hair about 1/2 way through the process
Each dread was taking us about 30 min to complete. I tried working on some of the front ones, while he did the back ones. Overall took about a week because our fingers (and my head) was pretty sore.
Almost complete
I wasn't sure about leaving out my bangs or not… I saw many cute pictures of girls who had left theirs out so I thought I would leave the front bang un-dreaded and see what I though.
After about 2 weeks I realized that with my oily hair I was having to wash my bangs every other day or so, but I didn't want to wash my whole head that often and it was just a pain so I went ahead and dreaded the front as well.
Added in a few beads…