![]() ![]() ![]() The Buttercup Blow Dryer rings in at $195, which is a bit more than I'm willing to spend on a blow dryer.ĭrybar Buttercup Blow Dryer, $195, Sephora You pay at least $60 for a blowout at a traditional salon, so why not pay a fraction of that? I've never actually been to a Drybar, but I have friends who rave about it, so I figured I could trust their product. The first time I heard about it, it sounded to me like something out of a Saturday Night Live skit, but the more I learned, the more it made sense. For those who don't know, Drybar is a blow dry bar in Manhattan that does blowouts (and only blowouts) for $40. The sales associate at Sephora pointed me to the Drybar Buttercup Blow Dryer. So, I headed to Sephora to see if expensive blow dryers are actually worth the dent in my bank account. I splurged on my hair-straightener, but I’ve always sort of assumed that blow dryers were one of those beauty items you could save on. What I didn't tell my hairdresser is that, not only did I cheap out on a drugstore blow-dryer, it is five years old and has a two-inch hole burnt in the diffuser. When she asked what kind of blow dryer I was using I just shrugged and said, "I don't know. I sat in humiliation as my hairdresser remarked how damaged my hair was. Recently, though, I took one look at the frizzy mess of split ends that had become my hair and decided it was time to bite the bullet and take a visit to the salon. For nearly a year, I swore off scissors, becoming more fearful of my hairdresser than my dentist. Ever since I impulsively chopped off all my hair last spring, I have been (not so) patiently waiting for my hair to grow back. ![]()
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