3A Curly Hair Products.
loose, springy ringlets the width of a sidewalk-chalk piece — defined and bouncy
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About 3A loose-curl hair
Type 3A forms loose, springy ringlets — clear corkscrew loops about the diameter of sidewalk chalk. 3A has more density than 2C, holds pattern reliably when moisturised, and responds beautifully to the LCO/LOC layering method. It's the curl type most associated with the term "natural curl" in mainstream beauty and sits at the start of the type 3 family.
Identifying 3A hair
Strand circumference matches a sidewalk chalk piece (about 10-12mm). The curl forms a complete loop — full corkscrew shape — that holds when stretched and released. Wet 3A looks similar to dry 3A with minimal loosening as gravity pulls. Shrinkage is typically 20-30%.
Compare with 2C (wavy S-bend, not a full loop) and 3B (tighter loops, Sharpie-marker diameter). If your hair forms loops the size of a finger or larger, you're 3A. Smaller loops (the size of a pen) suggest 3B.
What 3A hair needs
Mid-weight to slightly-heavier curl creams work well for 3A. Look for products labelled "for type 3" or "loose curls" — they're formulated to define without weighing the pattern down. The Innersense, Curlsmith, and Bounce Curl ranges all suit 3A.
Frizz reduces significantly once you find the right routine — 3A is one of the most responsive curl types to layered moisture. The standard pattern: leave-in, curl cream, optional gel, plop, dry without disturbing.
The 3A wash-day routine
Cleanse with a sulphate-free shampoo 1-2 times a week. Deep condition weekly under heat (heat cap or plastic cap with body heat for 20-30 minutes). Apply leave-in to soaking-wet hair, layer a curl cream + optional gel, plop with microfibre 15-20 minutes, diffuse on low or air-dry.
Sulphate-free is non-negotiable for 3A — sulphates strip the natural oils that keep ringlets hydrated and bouncy. Look for surfactants like sodium lauroyl methyl isethionate, coco-glucoside, or decyl glucoside.
Porosity and 3A
3A spans low to high porosity. Run the float test: clean strand drops in room-temperature water for 5 minutes. Floats = low porosity (needs heat-conditioning, lightweight humectants). Sinks = high porosity (needs sealing oils, bond-builders, layered moisture).
Low-porosity 3A benefits from steam treatments, glycerin-based humectants (in mid-humidity climates), and water-based stylers. High-porosity 3A needs LOC method, weekly protein treatments, and sealing with jojoba or argan oil.
UK climate adjustments
UK summer humidity averages 75-90% — humectants in your styler pull moisture from the air into your hair, causing 3A frizz. Switch to polymer-based stylers like The Doux Silent Treatment in July-August. Winter heating drops indoor humidity to 30% — increase moisture layers.
All 3A products in this collection are screened for mid-weight formulas that suit loose ringlets without flattening. Free UK delivery over £25, next-working-day shipping before 2pm.
Loose ringlet care
Type 3A is the loosest true curl pattern — visible S-curls that form a defined ringlet when wet. The big mistake new 3As make is using too-heavy product (designed for 3C-4 hair). Heavy butters drag 3A ringlets into a stringy curtain. Light-to-medium products only: foaming mousses, gel-creams, water-based leave-ins.
3A holds curl pattern for 3-5 days with a satin pillowcase and a loose pineapple. Refresh days 2-3 with a curl-refresh spray (Innersense Refresh Hair Spray) and finger-twist flat sections. Wash days 1-2 per week; co-wash midweek if hair feels dry.
The 3A volume problem
Loose curl pattern + length = root flatness. Volume comes from clip-rooting (small clips at the root while drying), upside-down diffusing for the first 5 minutes, and root-pumping with the diffuser cup. Avoid teasing/back-combing — disturbs the cuticle and creates frizz.
Related collections
Explore related collections: 2C hair products, 3B hair products, curl creams, Innersense and curly hair must-haves.