The reason most people struggle with waves isn’t because they don’t work hard enough. It’s because their routine changes too often. One week they’re brushing heavy, the next week they’re trying something new, and then they wonder why progress feels inconsistent.
The routine that actually works is simple and repeatable. That’s the part people don’t like, because it doesn’t feel exciting. But waves are built through repetition, not variety.
Daily brushing is the foundation. You don’t need hours. You need focused time with the same angles every day. When your angles stay consistent, your hair knows where it’s supposed to lay. When they don’t, your waves never fully form.
Moisture matters just as much as brushing. Dry hair doesn’t train well. A light moisturizer or oil before brushing helps your hair move instead of resisting. Heavy products slow things down, so keeping it light is key.
Compression is what protects the routine. Brushing builds the pattern, but compression keeps it in place. Skipping nights or wearing loose compression lets your hair reset in the wrong direction.
People with deep waves didn’t find a secret routine. They committed to the basics and didn’t break them. That’s what actually works.
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#waveroutine #360waves #durag #wavecaps


