Natural Hair Care
SKU:
$40.00
$40.00
Unavailable
per item
Description
Wednesday, April 10th, 6:30-8pm
Wednesday, April 10th, 6:30-8pm
If you are interested in making your own herbal shampoos, hair rinses, and scalp treatments then this workshop is for you. Includes recipes and samples to take home.
Join Joann Darling for this for this class all about hair care.
Joann Darling is a native Vermonter practicing and teaching skills in traditional arts and gardening.
She enjoys working with children and is a Gardens for Learning program coordinator and food justice educator through the non-profit Good Food Good Medicine Barre, VT. Joann is adjunct faculty at the Vermont Center for Integrative Herbalism, and their production garden manager. She is certified through the National Association of Interpreters, teaches fiber and natural dye workshops for the Marshfield School of Weaving and at the ROOTS survival school in Corinth VT. Her work with flax fiber has been recognized by the Vermont Folk Life Center where she received grant funding to pursue an in-depth study in bast fibers.
Cost: $40, registration required.
Join Joann Darling for this for this class all about hair care.
- Herbs and essential oils can be used to promote hair and scalp health.
- Many of the commercially available products leave a residue on your hair that can dull its natural shine, and may even contain toxins.
- Good quality soaps made with olive oil can be used as a shampoo alone or as the base ingredient in natural hair washes.
- Apple cider vinegar diluted with water leaves hair soft and shiny, invigorates the scalp, and eliminates dandruff all for mere pennies an application!
Joann Darling is a native Vermonter practicing and teaching skills in traditional arts and gardening.
She enjoys working with children and is a Gardens for Learning program coordinator and food justice educator through the non-profit Good Food Good Medicine Barre, VT. Joann is adjunct faculty at the Vermont Center for Integrative Herbalism, and their production garden manager. She is certified through the National Association of Interpreters, teaches fiber and natural dye workshops for the Marshfield School of Weaving and at the ROOTS survival school in Corinth VT. Her work with flax fiber has been recognized by the Vermont Folk Life Center where she received grant funding to pursue an in-depth study in bast fibers.
Cost: $40, registration required.