When was shampoo discovered
Berlin chemist, Hans Schwarzkopf, opens a drugstore dedicated to perfume and focuses his efforts on hair care products , including a popular, water-soluble, dry shampoo that despite the convenience, still causes dulling, alkaline reactions. It claims that hair is best shampooed at night, following thorough combing and brushing, and singeing split ends. Castile soap is applied with a stiff brush and rinsed four times every month to six weeks. Kasey Hebert invents the first commercial shampoo.
Ads for Canthrox Shampoo show young women at camp washing their hair in a lake; magazine ads by Rexall feature Harmony Hair Beautifier and Shampoo. The first shampoo containing synthetic surfactants is introduced as Drene. John Breck introduces one of the first shampoos to America and develops one of the first pH-balanced shampoos. Chemists discover ways to suspend polymers in shampoo, to fill in the bumps and ruts where hair is damaged by detergent.
D id you know that shampooing was first invented in India? The practice of using shampoo dates back to AD when a concoction of boiled r eetha soap berries , a mla gooseberry , hibiscus, shikakai Acacia and other hair friendly herbs, was made and used on the scalp to healthify and cleanse the tresses.
In many households across India, grandmothers still follow this practice of drying certain leaves and flowers and making a paste from it. If my nonagenarian grandmother had her way, she would still be making her own shampoo powder. Sake Dean Mahomed, born in in Patna, belonged to a family from the barber community. Probably not. Since , liquid has been the most common form factor for hair cleansing.
It was not until that Hans Schwarzkopf created a soap-free liquid. These developments were the most significant in terms of what we now know as modern-day liquid shampoo. Since then, innovation related to washing our hair has mainly dealt with the innovation of raw materials ingredients and packaging. Prior to this, hair in the Western world would have been pretty rank. Only professional hairstylists got to use it, and it came in a solid form, a lot like a bar of soap!
Thankfully, by the s, the rest of society was happily lathering up at home. But not regularly, mind you: shampoo was a luxury product, so they were only using it about once a month. Unfortunately, this only applied to those with unhealthy hair:. White castile soap or tar soap were both recommended as good shampoos. Liquid shampoo was invented in the s yay!
As a result, shampooing became a LOT easier. Fast forward to the s, and the first pH-balanced shampoo was developed.
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