When was hair dryer invented




















AER is also the only cordless hair dryer with a DC ionizer, which uses ions to neutralize static electricity, gently creating glossiness and cutting dry time in half.

Frizz, be gone! The AER dryer is also designed to team-up with our smartphone app, which unlocks expert tips to help you make the most of your AER drying experience and keep your locks healthy and beautiful. Continual connectivity enables your AER dryer to keep getting smarter, tailoring the drying experience perfectly to your preferences. Get ready to turn some heads!

From an item that kept you tethered to the spot, just like those earlier models your grandmother used, to a piece of art that you can take anywhere—and that works hard to keep your hair healthier than ever, too. Take your AER to the beach. Blow-dry under the stars, in your car, or from the luxury of your own bed. Talk about a revolution. Last chance to get the AER dryer with a huge discount on Kickstarter! These hand-held devices also contained a fatal flaw: a tendency to electrocute the user!

The power of hair dryers was also limited by the electric motors available. The revolution was still waiting to happen. Get gorgeous and help save the planet? Sign us up! AER also features some awesome attachments that are now part of any modern hair dryer kit. Hello, bouncy and beautiful locks! This dryer works similarly to the bonnet dryer of the s but at a much higher wattage. In the s, the U. Consumer Product Safety Commission set up guidelines that hair dryers had to meet to be considered safe to manufacture.

Since the CPSC has mandated that all dryers must use a ground fault circuit interrupter so that it cannot electrocute a person if it gets wet. By , deaths by blow dryers had dropped to fewer than four people a year, a stark difference to the hundreds of cases of electrocution accidents during the midth century. I remember the first blow dryer we had. I was born in When I was 12 yrs, I remember a small white plastic hand held blow dryer.

Long hair was admired, till my sister gave her self a Farah Fawcet hair cut, found in a magazine. Best not dwell on the damage the original devices, with no way to regulate temperature, could do to your hair!

But, without a flow of hot air, it could be a real challenge to straighten wavy hair quickly, create looser, glamorous curls with a barrel brush instead of rollers and smooth the frizzy or flyaway.

Ionic technology now promises to combat static; attachments help create sleek or tousled looks; touch sensitive controls and multiple settings all give you greater control for super-fast drying. It was a major step forward from previous hair-drying contraptions, which amounted to little more than earthenware jars filled with hot water that were placed on the head. Mr Godefroy's invention set into motion a number of variations around the world and by the s there were electrical, handheld dryers which incorporated a heating element and a fan.

Made from metal, they tended to be immensely heavy, and their often wonky electrical connections and use in bathrooms sparked a number of deaths. But the ability to dry one's hair at home inspired new, simpler hairstyles, such as the bob, where the hairdryer gave a smooth sheen that had previously been only attainable in a salon.

It sparked a new focus on hair hygiene, with people washing their hair more regularly, which led to a boon for shampoo manufacturers.

The new invention was popularised thanks to the growing reach of women's magazines and an army of door-to-door salesmen.

By the s, thanks to new lightweight plastics, it was a rare household that didn't possess one. Hair salons still relied on the helmet-type dryer, usually set in a row so that customers could browse magazines or shout to each other above the noise of the fan while their perms were baked to perfection. The late s liberated hair styles, and the sense of natural bounce was aided by smaller, cheaper hairdryers that were designed to fit in a handbag, usually in a jaunty youthful colour.

Actress Farah Fawcett and even Princess Diana did much to promote the natural flick, which of course was anything but. Essentially, the dryer is little changed from those early models of a hundred years ago, even though companies continue to strive for the perfect hairdryer, promising better technology to give precise temperature and fan settings so hair doesn't scorch.

Faster, more efficient and certainly less lethal, there's now no excuse to refuse an invitation as you tend to your crowning glory.



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