In 2000, I co-authored an article for C&T magazine regarding the scalp irritation potential of lye and no-lye relaxers. The article includes our findings from a study based on comfort/discomfort evaluations from salon patrons.
Compared to Caucasian hair, African-American hair is extremely curly and it's physical configuration resembles a twisted ribbon. It is highly unmanageable. very difficult to comb-both wet and dry-and hard to style. More fragile than Caucasian hair, this excessively curly hair breaks more easily when stretched or vigorously brushed and combed. Thus, African-American hair requires both special handling and hair-care products that are differently formulated than those for Caucasian hair.
Madam C. J. Walker: A Beauty Product Pioneer
Madam C. J. Walker was an early 20th century beauty product pioneer. She was born under the name Sarah Breedlove to ex-slaves in 1867. In her early life, she worked in both the cotton fields and the kitchen. In 1905, after marrying newspaper sales agent Charles Joseph Walker, she adopted his name and developed expertise in manufacturing hair goods and preparations.
Walker soon launched her own business, designing cosmetics and hair-care products for black women. From this business she became one of the nation's first female millionaires. Using her success for the good of others, she earned a reputation as a philanthropist to African-American institutions such as the NAACP, Tuskegee Institute and Bethune-Cookman College. She died in 1919.
In 1998, the US Postal Service issued a stamp commemorating her achievement as an African-American businesswoman and philanthropist. The image on the stamp is from a circa 1914 photo that was used extensively by Walker's company for publicity purposes, in advertising, and on its products.
The Development of Relaxers
In the early 1900s, an African-American domestic worker, later known as Madam C. J. Walker, invented pomade using a combination of oils (see sidebar). This pomade revolutionized the hairstyling practices of African-American women and made excessively curly hair softer, shinier and somewhat easier to comb. However, the pomade did not straighten the hair. African-American women still could not achieve styles like those worn by Caucasian women.