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  2. Our Editors Swear By These Blow Dryer Brushes for a Perfect ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/never-break-sweat-again...

    Blow dryer brushes make styling your hair so much easier. Our editors tested and reviewed several hair dryer brushes and narrowed down the best ones.

  3. Hotpoint - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hotpoint

    The company name Hotpoint comes from the hot point of the innovative first electric iron. Invented by American, Earl Richardson (1871–1934) in 1905, he subsequently formed his Pacific Electric Heating Co. in Ontario, California, in 1906. [2] [3] The device became known as the Hotpoint iron, with its hottest point at the front and not the center.

  4. Hair dryer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hair_dryer

    A hair dryer (the handheld type also referred to as a blow dryer) is an electromechanical device that blows ambient air in hot or warm settings for styling or drying hair. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Hair dryers enable better control over the shape and style of hair, by accelerating and controlling the formation of temporary hydrogen bonds within each strand.

  5. Mangle (machine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mangle_(machine)

    In the 1930s electric mangles were developed and are still a feature of many laundry rooms. They consist of a rotating padded drum which revolves against a heating element which can be stationary, or can also be a rotating drum. Laundry is fed into the turning mangle and emerges flat and pressed on the other side.

  6. Hairbrush - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hairbrush

    Boar bristle brush: Tightly spaced boar-hair bristles are designed to increase tension while brushing, to smooth the hair. [1] Blow Dryer Attachment: An additional tool that can be attached to a hair blow dryer to brush and dry hair at the same time. The effects of brushing will be different depending texture and whether the hair is wet or dry.

  7. Drying - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drying

    Air heating increases the drying force for heat transfer and accelerates drying. It also reduces air relative humidity, further increasing the driving force for drying. In the falling rate period, as moisture content falls, the solids heat up and the higher temperatures speed up diffusion of water from the interior of the solid to the surface.