Take a section of hair and separate it from the rest of the hair. Clamp your flat iron on the base of the hair. I take the end of the hair and wrap it around the flat iron, if only to give it direction and keep it going in the same movement. This is where the bevel on your flat-iron comes into play. You are basically using the bevel to curl the hair. So after I clamp onto the hair, I pull the hair on the bevel in the direction I am curling. Now, keeping the iron clamped, slowly slide it away from the base of the hair towards you. As you are sliding it out, you slowly twist the flat iron like you would when wrapping hair in a curling iron
See how I have my hand holding onto her hair and it is wrapped around the iron? That is not a necessary step...HOWEVER...it makes for more control AND it keeps the hair together to make more of a ringlet. If you don't do that, the curl ends up being unpredictable.
Here is where I am twisting and sliding at the same time.
Follow this same fluid movement to the end of the hair.
And let go.
This second one shows more detail than the first.
Clamp
Twisting and sliding
Now I find as I get towards the end that sometimes the hair gets tight, so I loosen my grip on my flat iron.
All this took me two minutes, tops.
But I didn't want to leave ringlets, so I ran my fingers through the curls.
And separated them by pulling the top from the bottom.
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