The Mdlondon Curl is a curly wand with a difference. On the one hand, it looks more like something you would find in a toolbox than in a dressing table. That wand of angle to the right is designed to be more comfortable to sustain, for a style experience with more control and less arm pain. Unfortunately, the only demonstration video that I can find shows someone who has taken his hair, and I am struggling to imagine how you could use it in yourself.
The main body of the curler is very similar to most of the best hair dryers today. However, it is not a hair dryer: there is no air that blows. Ceramic barrels simply heat up to put their hair in place, like a traditional clamp.
Another great update is that the barrel of curls is adjustable. The curl comes with four different barrel styles, and can simply change them for different looks. There is a fairly standard barrel of 25 mm, one of 31 mm thicker for larger curls, an ultra thin 10 mm for super -squeeze sacks and an inverse intriguing (in the photo below) that the brand says that it will give it a relaxed and beach appearance.
While I am still a little insecure about the design at right angles, I am completely sold by the idea of the interchangeable barrels. In a market flooded with multiple styles, you are beginning to feel outdated to have a tool that only does one thing, and this is an intelligent way to add versatility. Small curly wands (to create tight curls) are having a moment at this time, but for most people that will be an occasional aspect instead of something for each day. Adding it as an option along with more relaxed curls of curls saves you having to buy a complete separate device that you may not need so often.
We have tried the MDLONDON hair devices before and we have constantly impressed ourselves: the characteristics of the Mdlondon Strait in our best rounding of hair laughter, and we find the hair dryer Mdlondon Blow “light but luxurious, compact but powerful.” Both have some slightly out of the ordinary design adjustments, although neither is as rotating as the curl. I am interested in seeing how it remains in practice, and if other hair brands begin to do the same.
Heat vs. air
It is a bit unusual to see that a traditional heated clamp is launched (although within a non -traditional design) these days. The current approach seems to have to do with Airwrap Dyson style tools that use the air directed to create curls using the Coanda effect. The idea is that it is better for your long -term hair health because there is less extreme heat.
While I like that approach, I just reviewed the identification of Dyson Airwrap and I was very impressed, and today’s best Airwrap duos are also increasingly capable, I will grant that it has its inconvenience. Air -created curls still tend to fall faster than those created with heat, the hairstyle process takes longer (and especially if it is diligent about the use of a cold shot to help establish each curl) and can also be complicated: hair is also attracted to the barrel and automatically wraps, but it must be necessary or will end with threads of other curves of other curves that are currently being worked on. It may be that a traditional renewed clamp is just what we need.
The Mdlondon Curling wand is currently currently available in the United Kingdom, and costs £ 129 (but that would make it around $ 168 or Au $ 270, as an approximate estimate).