
I’ve been actually amazed by a hair dryer twice earlier than: once I tried the RevAir Reverse-Air Dryer, which might straighten hair because it dries, in addition to the Dyson Supersonic, which packs numerous energy right into a luxe and compact design. It’s time so as to add a 3rd to the checklist: the Zuvi Halo.
At $349, it is simply as expensive because the aforementioned fashions, but the Zuvi is exclusive for its potential to dry hair rapidly with out utilizing intense warmth. Less warmth means a smaller likelihood of warmth injury to your hair, and who would not need that?
Heat Waves
Photograph: Zuvi
Heat injury is an issue, particularly for curlies who typically endure texture and curl sample adjustments from extreme flat ironing. You’d suppose the reply could be no warmth in any respect, but air drying is not nice both. Hair is in a fragile state when wet, so diffusing—spreading and softening the airflow from a hair dryer—on a decrease warmth is a greater method.
But diffusing is not at all times a straightforward reply. I’ve thick hair, and despite the fact that it is not very lengthy it normally takes a day to dry, particularly the underlayers near the basis. Most days, I diffuse my hair midway on the very best warmth doable earlier than giving up.
Zuvi claims its MildCare Technology mimics the expertise of drying your hair in daylight and with the wind—so there is no intense warmth in your hair—and it may nonetheless dry in a shorter time in comparison with different hair dryers. I used to be skeptical, but utilizing the Zuvi over the previous few weeks, I have been capable of dry my hair absolutely with out getting drained (or bored), and I did not need to take care of oven-like temperatures.
The firm says it makes use of infrared gentle (reasonably than conventional convective warmth) to warmth simply the floor of your hair as a substitute of drying it out to the core. It’s tough to check whether or not that is precisely what occurred once I used the Zuvi, but I did discover the next enhancements: The warmth coming from the Halo did not really feel practically as sizzling as different dryers I’ve used; I might put the diffuser straight on my scalp with out it burning; and my hairline wasn’t getting sweaty midway via the method, plus the air did not singe my eyes when it blew throughout my face.
Instead of separate warmth and velocity settings, the Halo has 4 modes that mix the 2, plus a chilly shot should you maintain down the mode button. There’s Care, which determines temperature output based mostly on the temperature within the room drops the warmth as your hair dries. Fast mode works nice with the diffuser and makes use of the next warmth. Soft turns the warmth and wind down, so use it in case your scalp is delicate or that you must rapidly blow-dry the canine. And lastly, Style is supposed for use with the concentrator attachment and makes use of extra warmth to straighten your hair but much less wind, to maintain it in place.
Fresh Air
Photograph: Zuvi
Despite the decrease temperature, the Halo reduce down the time it took to dry my hair. Mind you, it nonetheless takes me a very long time, but each minute saved helps. Anyone who can use it with none attachments or with thinner hair will doubtless see much more time financial savings. It makes use of much less power too, simply 680 watts of power. That’s a stark distinction from our favourite dryer, the $40 Hairitage Comin’ In Hot, which makes use of 1,875 watts.
All of the attachments snap on magnetically, and my favourite is Zuvi’s Gentle Air. Before, I’d by no means contact my hair with no diffuser if I used to be planning to put on it curly. Other attachments, or a dryer with none, are inclined to blow hair round an excessive amount of, inflicting frizz and puffiness. But now I begin with the diffuser and end with the Gentle Air, each of which have reduce my complete hair-drying time by round 10 minutes (40 minutes now versus 50 minutes with most different hair dryers).