Some of the real life examples of static electricity are:rubbing the balloon on your hair and your hair will stick onto the balloonrubbing plastic pen or comb on a jumper & pieces of paper will stick onto itbrushing your hair & hair will stick on your skin if you have a long hairif your hair's down, & you're going to put your sweater on your hair will stick onto your sweater
Put a small amount of selected coloured hair dye, then buy a white/blonde wig and cut the selected amount of hair off of the wig. Get a hair dye brush and dye your artificial hair. Get a Comb Clip and get some hair glue and stick the hair onto your comb! =)
When combing your hair, you transfer electrons from your hair onto the comb. This leaves your hair with a net positive charge (since it loses electrons) and the comb with a net negative charge (since it gains electrons).
If you transfer electrons from your hair to the comb, your hair will become positively charged because it loses electrons. The comb, having gained electrons from your hair, would be negatively charged.
To stick shells onto a pot, you can use strong adhesive glue that is safe for outdoor use. Apply a generous amount of glue to the back of the shell and press it firmly onto the pot. Allow the glue to dry completely before moving or handling the pot.
When you scuff electrons from your hair onto a comb, your hair becomes positively charged since it loses electrons, while the comb becomes negatively charged as it gains those electrons. This transfer of charge creates a separation of charges between the two objects.
When you rub a pen on your hair, you transfer some of the oils and static electricity from your hair onto the pen. This can make the surface of the pen slightly sticky, causing the paper to stick to it.
put your hair in a ponytail, put a shower cap on, BOBBYPIN it in place, th etake your shower! and if your hair looks greasy, put some powder,(like deoderant powder that doesn't smell much) on a comb and comb it onto the base of your head.
1. open the package 2. dip the little comb in 3. comb it onto the part of your hair that you want the color on 4. dont wash for a day or two if you want the color to stay longer, if you have bleached hair, you can wash it out and it will still be there, dark hair does not work, otherwise, dry, style as desired and enjoy
Since your hair is fine, it is likely much harder for you to secure the tiara and veil. This means more of a base to anchor to. Using more, smaller bobby pins will help (versus larger hair pins, which tend to slide out easier). Also consider a metal veil comb, instead of the standard plastic. It will hold pins better. After securing the comb in your hair, pin the comb to your hair. Experiment with hair piece clips as well (the kind that hold hair extensions onto shorter hair). These actually clamp onto your hair instead of simply sliding in. Some tiaras are actually attached to combs, so you can use similar methods to hold these in place. To avoid having to worry about the tiara and veil separately, you can get a tiara comb and sew the veil to it (in much the same way a veil attaches to a plain veil comb). The disadvantage to that approach is you cannot remove the veil without also removing your tiara.
Fold wax paper over a simple comb (used for combing hair) and put your lips against it with lips slightly parted. Hum onto the waxed paper/comb. It sounds like a kazoo!
You have to tease your hair, basically you need to section your hair first using clips. Then comb the hair upwards towards your roots the more vigorously you do this the bigger your hair will be, a tip is to use some hair spray afterwards but not to spray it directly onto the hair just spray a mist around you.