Everyone has a different hair pattern.It depends on different hair textures.Here is the science behind it.The amount of curl, wave, or lack thereof in our hair is dependent on the number of disulfide bonds between hair proteins found in the hair shaft. Disulfide bonds are one of the most active naturally-occurring bonds in nature.

What Causes Different Hair Textures?

The protein structures of the hair shaft are held together by chemical bonds called disulfide and hydrogen bonds. While the curliness (or straightness) of your hair depends on the shape of the follicle, it's the disulfide bonds that keep the hair in the way it forms naturally.The higher the number of links, the curlier the hair, and the fewer the number of links, the straighter the hair. Hair is primarily composed of keratin, a protein, which grows from the follicle. Keratins and other proteins formulate in the cells of the hair follicle.

All of the proteins become a part of the hair shaft and contain sulfur atoms. When two sulfur atoms pair up and bond, they form a disulfide bond. If the two sulfur atoms in the same protein are at a distance and join to form the disulfide bond, the protein will bend.

Here Are Different Hair Patterns Includes:

Type 1: Straight Hair

Generally speaking Type 1 hair is straight hair; however, Andre categorizes this hair type into three particular segments -Type 1A, Type 1B, and Type 1C.

1A type hair is delicate, very thin and soft with a noticeable shine.

Type 1B hair is medium-textured and has more body than Type 1A hair.

1C hair is the most resistant to curly styling and relatively coarse compared to other Type 1 hair types.

Type 2: Wavy Hair

Type 2 is wavy hair that usually isn't overly oily or very dry. For example body wave.

The thought is that Type 2 hair falls right in the middle of Type 1 and Type 3.

2A hair is fine and thin. It is relatively easy to handle from a styling perspective because it is simple to straighten or curl.

2B Type hair characteristically has waves that tend to adhere to the shape of your head.

Type 2C hair will frizz quickly, and it is relatively coarse.

Type 3: Curly Hair

Curly hair textures have a definite "S" shaped curl pattern. Since the cuticle doesn't lay flat, you will notice that curly hair isn't nearly as shiny as Type 1 (straight hair) or Type 2 (wavy hair) hair types.

Type 3A hair is gleaming and loose.

3B hair has a medium amount curls, ranging from bouncy ringlets (spiral like curls of hair) to tight corkscrews (spiral-shaped corkscrew curls).

Type 3C hair isn't a part of the Andre Walker Hair Typing System.

Type 4: Kinky Hair

This hair type is "kinky hair" or more appropriately full of tight coils (tightly curled hair). Type 4 hair is one the most common hair types found in black hair (African American hair).

Type 4A hair is full of tight coils. It has an "S" pattern when stretched, much like Type 3 curly hair.

Type 4B hair has a less defined pattern of curls and looks more like a "Z" as the hair bends with very sharp angles.

Type 4C hair isn't a part of the Andre Walker Hair Typing System.

They created type 3C hair after Andre Walker released his hair typing system by a community member at Nadula.com.

The prevailing thought was that the original hair typing system left this hair type out. Type 3C hair is tight curls or coils that look like corkscrews. Type 4C, like Type 3C, isn't an actual hair type according to Andre Walker's Hair System.

His comments are straightforward regarding Type 4 (Kinky) hair-if you can see a definite curl pattern, then you have Type 4A hair. If you can't identify a defined, specific curl pattern, then your hair type is 4B.

These are different hair patterns of hair weaves.Different hairstyles can give people different look. So people can choose any human hair patterns as they like.

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