Spray-on hair

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Spray-on hair or hair in a can is a hairstyling product consisting of an aerosol spray applied to balding areas of the scalp to create artificial hair covering that area. Spray-on hair generally works in one of two ways. Either it directly colors the scalp and enhances whatever hair is in the area by thickening it, or it generates hair-like filaments that cling to the scalp and existing hair.[1]

Spray-on hair was one of the products pioneered by Ronco in the 1980s, under the name "GLH-9" (Great Looking Hair Formula #9).[2] The product "was popular in the 1990s with 30-minute infomercials for the product on late-night cable TV",[3] and the Ronco version sold over a half million cans.[3] GLH came out in liquid form but contained powder particles that stuck to the follicles on the scalp.[4]

In the documentary TV series Bald!, spray-on hair is one of the products tried by a participant on the show, with poor results.

References[]

  1. ^ William R. Rassman, Robert M. Bernstein, Hair Loss and Replacement For Dummies (2008), p. 140.
  2. ^ Gersh Kuntzman, Hair!: Mankind's Historic Quest to End Baldness (2001), p. 83.
  3. ^ a b Kerry Segrave, Baldness: A Social History (1996), p. 90.
  4. ^ Wischhover, Cheryl (2018-12-17). "How spray-on hair does (and doesn't) work". Vox. Retrieved 2019-05-16.


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