Where to start. There is so much mixed-up information about shower filters out there. Which isn't helped by the fact that some brands make claims they cannot possibly achieve - but they still help even though they don't claim to do what they claim to do. ©Science-y Hair Blog 2024
Most filter claims are all about hard water, purifying water, or softening it.
Softening water - a visual summary |
Only a water softener you add salt to can actually soften water. "Soften" has a fixed definition in water-treatment, and also a less-clear one that is used in marketing.
- True water softening: A cation-exchange resin pulls out hard-water minerals (the cations, right!? Mostly Calcium and Magnesium) and trades them for salt. Softened water tends to feel a little slippery, whereas naturally soft water may not. A water softener is usually a large-ish appliance that softens all or most of the water for your entire home. There is only one brand of in-shower softener (Showerstick by Watersticks) and yes, you have to add salt to it - weekly for most homes.
- Pseudo-softening: Many shower filters claim to soften water. They aren't sticking to the water-treatment definition. They're making up their own. Maybe it removes chlorine, sediment, many can do that quite well. But to change actual hardness minerals? Nope. Maybe it claims to make your shower more alkaline with ceramic balls! You know how bleach solution feels slippery? Baking soda dissolved in water feels a little slippery too. It's the alkaline quality that does that - and for a reason that has nothing to do with removing hard-water-minerals. Slippery and soft are not the same. Alkaline solutions react with the oils on your skin - breaking them down - it feels slippery.
There is so much to unpack here. I'm giving a green light (π) to the things that filters CAN DO that are great for your hair. And rolling my eyes at the dodgier claims (π).
- π Removing or reducing chlorine disinfectant. This is great for your skin and hair. Even if you don't have hard water, if you have city water, you have chlorine disinfectant. That can be drying and somewhat damaging to hair and can irritate skin.
- π Preserving hair color. This can result from reducing chlorine. More about that below.
- π Create alkaline shower water. Or "increase shower pH." Or "balance shower pH." Maybe that will make the water feel more slippery. Maybe that feels "softer?" There really isn't any good data supporting a higher pH as being better for skin or hair. Skin's natural pH is on the acidic side, and hair is at its most resilient at a pH that is around 6 (I have a wading-into-the-weeds post about that here). Tap water's pH can be all over the place - check with your water-treatment facility to find yours.
- π Balance water pH? How can an in-the-box filter "know:" 1) The starting pH of the water. 2) What the end-goal is? 3) How to adjust for that?
- If your water has a lower pH, it's possible that raising it with a shower filter might change the way products feel in your hair. But see the previous bullet point.
Science-y Hair Blog © 2024 by Wendy M.S. is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
Comments
Post a Comment