
The Cut Is Everything
If your goal is tight, spinning 360 waves, the haircut you start with matters just as much as every brushing session after. This isn’t something you wing — you train your hair like you’d train muscles at the gym.
1. Start With the Right Cut
You need a fresh, even haircut before you begin. Ask your barber for:
A low brush cut — something like a #1.5 to #2 guard with the grain. A clean shape-up/line-up so your wave pattern has crisp edges to form around. Avoid super short cuts — too low and your hair won’t lay down for waves.
Think of your haircut as the canvas for your waves.
2. Brush With Intent (The Real Work)
Brushing is not optional, and sloppy brushing is why a lot of attempts stall out. You’re literally training your curls to lie down in a circular pattern.
How to brush properly:
Top: From the crown straight forward toward your forehead. Sides: From the crown down toward your ears at a slight 45-degree angle. Back: From the crown straight down toward your neck.
Frequency: Brush daily — aim for multiple sessions totaling 30–60 minutes spread throughout the day for best results.
Use firm bristles. As your hair grows, you’ll graduate through soft → medium → firm brushes.
3. Moisture Is Your Friend
Dry hair doesn’t wave — it shrugs. Hydrated hair lays down and stays pliable.
After washing, apply a light moisturizer or oil. Apply before brushing to make training easier and reduce breakage. Don’t overload with product — a little goes a long way.
4. Wear a Durag Every Night
Compression isn’t a fashion accessory — it’s how you set the pattern you brush into your hair.
Wear your durag snugly at night. Some people wear it throughout the day between brush sessions. Silk or satin material preserves moisture and reduces frizz.
This locks in the pattern while you sleep, so your progress isn’t lost.
5. Maintain Over Time
360 waves don’t happen overnight. Here’s how to keep progress steady:
Wash routine
Wash with gentle, sulfate-free shampoo once or twice a week. Conditioner after shampoo keeps hair soft. Brush through shampoo/conditioner for a “wash n style.”
Haircuts
During the early train phase (“wolfing”), avoid cutting too soon — let the hair grow. Once waves start forming consistently, trim every 2–3 weeks to maintain length.
Mistakes to avoid
Skipping brushing. Not wearing your durag. Using too much product that weighs hair down.
The Long and Short of It
Getting 360 waves is basic in concept but demanding in execution. You need:
A fresh, correct haircut Consistent brush discipline Moisture and styling products that don’t kill pattern Nightly compression with a durag
Put that together with patience and you’ll start seeing deep, looping wave patterns rather than random curls
