Le Baby Hair Gel – Hair Gel for Babies & Children

I’ve always thought Kora and Logan were each born with hair the other would love. Logan’s hair is coarse and thick like Tired Dad Dave’s, while Kora’s hair is stick-straight and very fine like mine. I remember growing up and envying other girls who could flip their hair up on top of their head and make it stay there with a pencil. I’ve never understood how that works, but would love to be able to do it! I could never even get mine to stay in a french braid.

Kora’s hair is the same way. I’ve tried to braid it and it always slips out. I’ve been using hair gel in her hair nearly every day since she was a baby (both my kids were born with tons of hair). So I was very happy to hear that Le Baby Hair Gel has no harsh chemicals.

We gave it a try and it worked very well taming the frizzies and holding her hairstyle in place.

While this hairstyle doesn’t look like much, without gel Kora’s hair falls in front of her face and is constantly in her eyes.

We give Le Baby Hair Gel two thumbs up because it works well and it is hypo-allergenic for sensitive skin.

Thanks to Le Baby Hair Gel for providing the product for review. No compensation was provided for this review.

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...
Did you like this? Share it:

Leave a Comment

*

Comments

  1. Susan says:

    I’ll check it out. Thanks!

  2. Kristen says:

    I’m gonna haaaave to try this. My 20 month old daughter has maybe the finest little baby duck hair I’ve ever seen. In her face constantly, even with a new big girl haircut with bangs.

  3. 38traci says:

    I have the same issue with my daughter’s braids and I don’t like the harsh stuff in so many of the gels. I will have to try this.
    :-)
    Traci

  4. I have never heard of hair gel for babies. Nice to know about his. Thanks for the info! Rita Spratlen

  5. Mike says:

    Sometimes I wish I had had children. They sound like the are fun, trying, but fun…

    This takes me back quite a long time ago to “Dippity Do”. Also known as ‘hair concrete’. You could apply it to your hair and ‘sculpt’ After application, the product turned to a substance resembling Portland Cement..

    Being your usual, rebellious fifth graders, we – my best friend and I – we were, we would ‘obtain’ the product from his mom’s beauty shop. We did bizarre things with our hair. The school administration showed remarkable restraint in not sending us home from school, unless there was a threat that our hair would poke someone’s eye out.

    This lasted until we figured out what you could make with sulphur, charcoal and potassium nitrate… (which would now get us a life sentence at Gitmo).

    For those of you who missed the ‘Golden Age’ of Dippity Do – the early 1970′s – here a little trip down memory lane : http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xbupe7_dippity-do_shortfilms (a couple of commercials from the ’70′s).

    I think, later, the military realized that it was effective for repairing damaged tracks on tracked vehicles.