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As someone who romanticizes every part of the getting-ready process, you’d think I love styling my hair. Think again—I dread it. Over the years, I’ve made every haircare mistake in the book, and I’m especially hopeless at using hot tools on my curls (no matter how many TikTok tutorials I watch). Halfway through every attempt at a sleek blowout or polished waves, I run to my roommates for help rescuing my over-fluffed, full-of-crimps disaster.
Apparently, I’m not alone. According to Maria McCool, hairstylist and founder of Calista, I’m making a mistake she sees *all the time* on the job: using professional tools that simply aren’t designed for me. This common issue dates back to the 1980s, McCool says, when people began buying the hot tools their stylists used on them and putting them to work without ever learning how to use them. The issue? “[The tools are] made for somebody who's standing on top—not us, underneath our hair,” McCool says. “It’s obvious that they're not made for the consumer. They're made for hairstylists.”
Hearing this was a major aha moment for me. (Finally: The awkward creases after straightening and the blowouts that make me look more electrocuted than effortless, explained!) McCool’s realization was a lightbulb moment for her, too, and it eventually led to Calista. All of Calista’s tools are designed specifically for people doing their own hair, eliminating the awkward mechanics that can make styling feel impossible.
Calista is one of a handful of popular hot-tool brands that has turned its focus to accessibility for the average at-home, DIY styler (um, me) in recent years. Unlike professional tools designed for the salon, many new devices are now built with intuitive features that take the guesswork out of styling.
If you, like me, have spent years struggling with hair tools, it might be time to stop pushing yourself to become an expert at a device that wasn’t made with you in mind. McCool recommends starting with user-friendly hot tools like the FAUXblo Airless Thermal Blowout Brush and Perfector Pro, which are designed to be simple, effective, and beginner-friendly.
And beyond user accessibility, McCool says that hair texture can be a major factor in the hot-tool struggle. A flat iron that glides through fine, straight hair may not have enough grip or heat to smooth thick curls, while a high-temperature curling wand built for coarse hair could damage delicate strands. Choose devices that cater to your texture, she says, and you’ll usher in a getting-ready process that’s smoother, faster, and much less frustrating.
I’m not claiming to be a wizard with the curling wand, now or anytime soon. But McCool has helped me realize that my styling struggles aren’t unique to me, and they don’t come down to my lack of skill. With that in mind, I’m replacing my made-for-the-salon hair tools with ones that are actually designed for me—and replacing my discouraged getting-ready process with a hair routine that actually works, isn’t complicated, and doesn’t come with dread.
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