- Reaction score
- 22
I'm looking at ways to attain the best results while being as economical as possible. At this point I'm comfortable cutting the base and attaching the units myself.
I have very little experience with hair system types and have only tried .03mm poly units with an exposed hairline. I don't know if mono would be better than a .08 injected poly in terms of comfort and durability. Due to the supply shortage, those are the only two options I can find.
I'm very impressed by how natural the hairline on the .03 looks but am disheartened by the durability. Replacing a $200/300 system every 2 months is heavy.
I was thinking about buying a stock mono unit (or injected poly), cutting that to my template but exclude the hairline.
I was then thinking of buying a stock .03 poly unit (or that square that StickOnHair uses) and making a partial system for the front.
I would attach these two pieces separately, mono with tape perimeter and poly with glue.
The idea being, the mono will outlast civilization while I'm able to obtain many fronts out of a single .03 base, reducing over all unit turn over.
Would something like this work or would this experiment be a waste of money?
I have very little experience with hair system types and have only tried .03mm poly units with an exposed hairline. I don't know if mono would be better than a .08 injected poly in terms of comfort and durability. Due to the supply shortage, those are the only two options I can find.
I'm very impressed by how natural the hairline on the .03 looks but am disheartened by the durability. Replacing a $200/300 system every 2 months is heavy.
I was thinking about buying a stock mono unit (or injected poly), cutting that to my template but exclude the hairline.
I was then thinking of buying a stock .03 poly unit (or that square that StickOnHair uses) and making a partial system for the front.
I would attach these two pieces separately, mono with tape perimeter and poly with glue.
The idea being, the mono will outlast civilization while I'm able to obtain many fronts out of a single .03 base, reducing over all unit turn over.
Would something like this work or would this experiment be a waste of money?
Last edited: