🧴 Clean hair, happy life! ✨
The Boao Hair Brush Cleaning Tool is a versatile and practical solution for maintaining your hair combs. Featuring a dual-sided design with a plastic brush and nylon bristles, this tool effectively removes hair and debris. Made from durable wood and nylon, it’s lightweight and portable, making it perfect for home, salon, or travel use. Each package includes a black double-headed brush and a mini cleaning rake, ensuring you have everything you need for a thorough clean.
E**F
AWESOME HAIR BRUSH CLEANING TOOL!
This hair brush cleaning tool is super nice, it helps get hair out, and scrub. It saved my hair brushes and now I can clean them more often because this tool makes it easier. I recommend.
V**E
Hair brush cleaning tools
These items help keep my brushes clean of hair and residue. Very strong too
P**L
The black brush works the best
The black brush works well, the metal one not so well. As far as value for the money, not so good.
K**H
Hair brush cleaning tool.
Nice, sturdy tool for cleaning brushes. Nice sized handle. Great functionality. Easily removes hair from brushes.
J**L
Great product
These do an amazing job at cleaning all types of brushes. They are top quality and my brush looked new when finished. It will take more than one simple pass but did the job flawlessly including dandruff.
P**D
Could be better
The forks were of a good length. They were just not as sturdy as I needed to clean my hairbrush. Now, I ordered a plastic one at the same time. The plastic forks were much more sturdy and I am easily able to remove my hair.
D**R
Brush and comb cleaners
VERY HELPFUL IN GETTING A GOOD CLEANING OF YOUR BRUSHES AND COMBS.
L**H
Acceptable for the price
I use a couple of brushes that use the mixed bristle types: stiff plastic long bristles that are tipped with rounded beads, and (probably synthetic) boar bristle bundles surrounding the base of each of the long bristles. I got tired of cleaning these by hand as I felt that I just couldn't get them clean enough, so I decided to order some cheap cleaning tools for them.Both brushes are wooden; one is about 7 years old and now missing some of the longer bristles, the other has a painted finish and was bought this year. Probably not useful info for a review, but the 7yo brush spends a lot of time lying bristles-up on the bathroom counter, gets exposed to humidity basically every day, and I live in a dusty area and have cats. The older brush, thanks to the frequent humidity making it easier for the dust to adhere, was starting to look like I was using it to brush dryer lint or something.I first tried the fully plastic/silicone comb-shaped tool on both of my brushes. Due to the material used on it, I judge that it is gentle on the brushes, and the finish of the comb tool's teeth is slightly... Sticky? Tacky? It's that texture that makes you feel kind of gross for even touching it, like it's oozing some kind of residue. Anyway, that seems to be excellent for gripping dust, fluff, and hair, and pulling them off your brushes. It's also fairly easy to clean that stuff back off of the teeth. (I have not tried rinsing it off. Not only am I very lazy and slovenly, but I don't want to rinse off that wonderful super gross residue, and I don't want our mineral-heavy tap water to leave water spots full of calcium on it and possibly make it less effective...because I would have to dry it very thoroughly, and I am too lazy for that). I was fairly aggressive with using it on the brushes, and it seemed not to be cause any visible damage and I don't think the tool itself received any.I didn't even bother with the pick end of the comb tool, honestly. I'm guessing it would be useful if your hair was stuck on your brush so tightly that the other tools weren't strong enough to pull it off. My hair is very fine, though, so for me, I don't think the pick can do anything that the other end and rake can't just do better.A couple of days later, I gave the rake tool a run. Since both of my brushes are somewhat cheap trash, I went over their bristle-pads firmly with the rake. Just kidding, I forgot one was like $30 and was too careless; I recommend being extremely careful with the rake tool, because the metal teeth will most likely damage the finish of the brush's body anywhere you overshoot, and I think it will abrade the rubber bristle pad of the brush, which will make dandruff etc have more places to stick to the brush better, and then you won't be able to get it as clean. This tool probably isn't good for the brushes, I feel that it has too much potential to rip out and bend bristles, in addition to adding scratches to the pad and body of the brush like I mentioned. Anyway, with each stroke, hair gets more tightly wrapped around the metal teeth of the rake, making it less likely to get pushed back onto your brush. I think it removes hair the most quickly. The hair comes off the rake easily, as well, and the rake can more readily grab short bits of hair and fluff than the comb.Since the manufacturer has chosen to use a crimped metal ferrule (the metal sleeve wrapped around the teeth of the rake), I think you're unlikely to have the teeth fall out. However, the teeth of the rake are not very strong, and the tension from having hair wrapping tightly around them is a bit stronger than the metal used in the teeth, you will end up with bent rake teeth quickly. Once they are bent, they will lose strength, so if you bend them back into their original positions, they will be even weaker than before. I believe this tool should be used on your cheap crappy brushes that you don't care about, and probably used gently as well. Frequently stopping to remove hair from the rake would probably help extend its useful lifespan. Use your judgment to balance the cost of this tool against the value of your brush and time spent cleaning.I would rate these cleaners as slightly better than just "good enough", overall. I think the real winner is the comb tool's larger end in terms of gentleness and versatility, even if I feel it sucks in comparison to the rake tool in terms of how fast it removes fluff and hair; at least it probably won't destroy your brush or rapidly fall apart. Probably.No idea how well the plastics in these tools will hold up over time. We'll see, I guess.
Trustpilot
1 week ago
3 days ago