Weave Loan Store? What in tarnation

Nailed it Ten...

tarnation
<section id="source-luna" class="source-wrapper source-luna js-is-collapse-expand-open"><section class="luna-box"><header class="main-header oneClick-disabled head-big">
</header></section>interjection </section><section class="def-pbk"> 1. damnation.

</section><section class="def-pbk"> <header class="luna-data-header"> noun </header> 2. damnation; hell (used as a euphemism): Where in tarnation is that boy?

</section> <section class="def-pbk"> <header class="luna-data-header"> adverb </header> 3. damned.

1775-85; blend of ’tarnal, dial. form of eternal and damnation

</section>
 
Bitches hair smelling like Pump It Up and Dudley Q oil sheen... [emoji14]uke:

Sent from Clayton County Department of Corrections using Pay Phone
 
Wooooow! $1300?!

Most I had ever heard of is $700-900, and it last 2 months.

I think it's nasty to have the same hairstyle for that long. Bitches don't wash they hair & scalp? Shit smelling like sweat & Isoplus hair sheen.

Even if they're able to wash it and do so, it's still somebody else's hair on too of your head for longer than yo real hair is.. :smh:

Hell naw. You know you in Atlanta when...


Yall aint seen the new WE show. Chick who do the $50.00 weaves on there. Said she did billions last year. First it was one shop now they got six. You either gotta give weave in payments or make it look nice for cheap.


I hate to see what hood lady come up with quick celeb dresses on the fly. And not those chinese knockoffs...hell that's a hustle too.
 
Wooooow! $1300?!

Most I had ever heard of is $700-900, and it last 2 months.

I think it's nasty to have the same hairstyle for that long. Bitches don't wash they hair & scalp? Shit smelling like sweat & Isoplus hair sheen.

Even if they're able to wash it and do so, it's still somebody else's hair on too of your head for longer than yo real hair is.. :smh:

Lol this ain't that fam-o.

Let's just say that what you're describing and what I'm talking about live in two distinctly different neighborhoods.
 
Hell naw. You know you in Atlanta when...


Yall aint seen the new WE show. Chick who do the $50.00 weaves on there. Said she did billions last year. First it was one shop now they got six. You either gotta give weave in payments or make it look nice for cheap.


I hate to see what hood lady come up with quick celeb dresses on the fly. And not those chinese knockoffs...hell that's a hustle too.

That chick got ads plastered all over the MARTA train so she knows her demographic.

Here's a better idea than this bullshit weave loans.

How One Entrepreneur Raised $3 Million in Venture Capital Funding by Selling Hair Extensions

The idea of mixing the black hair market with the ecosystems of Silicon Valley may seem like a foreign concept to many, but for 34-year-old Hampton University alum Diishan Imira the idea sounded perfect.

Growing up in a family full of hair stylists and seeing first hand how black hair salons were not gaining profit off the hair extensions they were installing, Imira knew it was up to him to find a solution.

“We spend $9 billion on hair products every year, but less than 5 percent of [our salons] retail any products,” Imira told BlackEnterprise.com. “I wanted to change the way the products were sold. I wanted the hairstylists in the salons to be able to participate in the entire supply chain process.”

To solve this problem, the California native created an innovative technology platform that allows hair stylists to sell hair extensions directly to their clients without a middle man involved. With starter funding from family, friends and angel investors that totaled $50,000 Imira and his business partner, Taylor Wang, birthed the idea of Mayvenn, Inc. in 2012.

Unlike other American entrepreneurs in the hair weave business, Imira did not rely solely on his domestic contacts to build his company. With a background in international trade and a passion for building relationships with suppliers, Imira along with Wang traveled to Asia to get their first batch of inventory and build direct relationships with suppliers there. In addition to fostering relationships abroad, the two co-founders worked aggressively at home to gain funding for their start-up. But with an anti-pattern tech company in Silicon Valley, the young entrepreneurs faced many challenges with trying to get investors to understand the growing business of the black hair market.

“It took a very long time of knocking on doors trying to get people to hear us,” said Imira. “Then once the right person heard us, we got into this accelerator called 500 Startups, and once you get into that program it’s like now you have some credibility and investors start to listen in a different way.”

But getting accepted into 500 Startups in April 2013 seemed to be only half the battle for Imira and Wang, whose target product audience is the African American community.

“When we came into 500 Startups, every body was looking like ‘What is this crazy thing they let in? ‘This is technology and these dudes have boxes of hair,’” said Imira. “So you have the majority of people who don’t get it and don’t care, but then there are investors who are looking for things that are weird and that they don’t quite understand. That’s their investment thesis. They want to go find the things that not everybody else is doing.”

During the summer of 2013 Imira and Wang stayed in Mountain View, California where they immersed themselves into the cut throat culture of Silicon Valley and introduced their product to several investors. By August 2013, they raised $750,000 in investment funding and in October 2013 Mayvenn, Inc. was officially launched.

With just a year and a half of operational experience under its belt, Mayvenn has now raised $3 million in venture capital funding and has a network of over 25,000 stylists. With the continued mission to involve hair stylists in the process of buying and selling products, Imira and Wang’s goal is to eventually expand Mayvenn into an online platform that sells not only hair extensions but other hair care products as well.
 
You know what, I first thought what the hell, thought they were loaning the hair and wanting it back, but they are giving you the hair on loan and then you pay them over time. This is just another avenue of hard money type loans or predatory lending. Smart way of selling hair, but more credit issues for people with barely any money to make it by...

:yes:

damn this isn't funny this is some SUPER fucked up predatory ass behavior being perpetrated upon depressed black communities by Asiatic immigrants in corroboration/conjunction with international banks and the U-whited States of America. Fuck these motherfuckers in every opening with sizzling hot fire brands until they are rendered into nothing but heaps of gaping partially cauterized holes.

Not only do these businesses take money out of the hood and don't recycle not a damn dollar into the community, but now they are stealing future earnings from people that in many cases may just want to have SOMETHING in their lives that's not completely fucking depressing and miserable but can't afford because these businesses don't even HIRE any of the people in the community to work there.

Not their responsibility. No one is forcing black people to patronize them.


That is a good hustle:yes:. Your debt collection hand better be strong though.

It wouldn't surprise me if the company behind the weave loans already runs a payday loan or title loan business. Also, they get a recent paystub and a bank account number, so I'm sure there is a clause in the "weave loan contract" that lets them seize any money after a missed payment. I wonder what the APR is?
 
no different from the botox or cosmetic surgery industry. as a matter of fact it's not invasive and is less expensive. and white/asian/latina bitched been doing dumb shit for decades to get fake tiddies. and now ass.

the difference is the insane amount of scrutiny we put on every. single. thing. WE. do.

the loan shit is dumb as fuck no doubt, but damn i get tired of everything we do being somehow wrong-er than the rest of the fucking world populace.
 
That chick got ads plastered all over the MARTA train so she knows her demographic.

Here's a better idea than this bullshit weave loans.

How One Entrepreneur Raised $3 Million in Venture Capital Funding by Selling Hair Extensions

The idea of mixing the black hair market with the ecosystems of Silicon Valley may seem like a foreign concept to many, but for 34-year-old Hampton University alum Diishan Imira the idea sounded perfect.

Growing up in a family full of hair stylists and seeing first hand how black hair salons were not gaining profit off the hair extensions they were installing, Imira knew it was up to him to find a solution.

“We spend $9 billion on hair products every year, but less than 5 percent of [our salons] retail any products,” Imira told BlackEnterprise.com. “I wanted to change the way the products were sold. I wanted the hairstylists in the salons to be able to participate in the entire supply chain process.”

To solve this problem, the California native created an innovative technology platform that allows hair stylists to sell hair extensions directly to their clients without a middle man involved. With starter funding from family, friends and angel investors that totaled $50,000 Imira and his business partner, Taylor Wang, birthed the idea of Mayvenn, Inc. in 2012.

Unlike other American entrepreneurs in the hair weave business, Imira did not rely solely on his domestic contacts to build his company. With a background in international trade and a passion for building relationships with suppliers, Imira along with Wang traveled to Asia to get their first batch of inventory and build direct relationships with suppliers there. In addition to fostering relationships abroad, the two co-founders worked aggressively at home to gain funding for their start-up. But with an anti-pattern tech company in Silicon Valley, the young entrepreneurs faced many challenges with trying to get investors to understand the growing business of the black hair market.

“It took a very long time of knocking on doors trying to get people to hear us,” said Imira. “Then once the right person heard us, we got into this accelerator called 500 Startups, and once you get into that program it’s like now you have some credibility and investors start to listen in a different way.”

But getting accepted into 500 Startups in April 2013 seemed to be only half the battle for Imira and Wang, whose target product audience is the African American community.

“When we came into 500 Startups, every body was looking like ‘What is this crazy thing they let in? ‘This is technology and these dudes have boxes of hair,’” said Imira. “So you have the majority of people who don’t get it and don’t care, but then there are investors who are looking for things that are weird and that they don’t quite understand. That’s their investment thesis. They want to go find the things that not everybody else is doing.”

During the summer of 2013 Imira and Wang stayed in Mountain View, California where they immersed themselves into the cut throat culture of Silicon Valley and introduced their product to several investors. By August 2013, they raised $750,000 in investment funding and in October 2013 Mayvenn, Inc. was officially launched.

With just a year and a half of operational experience under its belt, Mayvenn has now raised $3 million in venture capital funding and has a network of over 25,000 stylists. With the continued mission to involve hair stylists in the process of buying and selling products, Imira and Wang’s goal is to eventually expand Mayvenn into an online platform that sells not only hair extensions but other hair care products as well.

Oh i like this.
 
for "good" bundles....they normally go for $50-$200 each....depending on the length and grade....and u need like 3-4 for a full install...for long hair u can easily spend $500 and up

man they are prolly doubling their money on the bundles ...and then the interest...serious money
 
no different from the botox or cosmetic surgery industry. as a matter of fact it's not invasive and is less expensive. and white/asian/latina bitched been doing dumb shit for decades to get fake tiddies. and now ass.

the difference is the insane amount of scrutiny we put on every. single. thing. WE. do.

the loan shit is dumb as fuck no doubt, but damn i get tired of everything we do being somehow wrong-er than the rest of the fucking world populace.

This. Maybe this self-criticism that a lot of black people do is just due to social segregation or something; just not really being around whites or other races enough to know their "issues".
 
:hmm:

Apply-for-a-Payday-Loan.jpg


korean-beauty-supply-store3.jpg


no different from the botox or cosmetic surgery industry. as a matter of fact it's not invasive and is less expensive. and white/asian/latina bitched been doing dumb shit for decades to get fake tiddies. and now ass.

the difference is the insane amount of scrutiny we put on every. single. thing. WE. do.

the loan shit is dumb as fuck no doubt, but damn i get tired of everything we do being somehow wrong-er than the rest of the fucking world populace.

no plex bro, but let me know when other ethnicities start buying kinky (black) hair extensions for cosmetic enhancement

picture a cavebitch going into a shop asking for a bag of that virgin ashanti plus & igbo chic...

:cool:
 
:hmm:

Apply-for-a-Payday-Loan.jpg


korean-beauty-supply-store3.jpg




no plex bro, but let me know when other ethnicities start buying kinky (black) hair extensions for cosmetic enhancement

picture a cavebitch going into a shop asking for a bag of that virgin ashanti plus & igbo chic...

:cool:

Why would they do that when they've been told they're the epitome of beauty for over a 1000 years and what they've been perceived as to infect the thinking of ever natural brown skinned peoples thought processes?

I'd really love for just 1 of you to hit the street or something and ask all these women why they do their hair the way they do. Instead of just assuming what you want.

A nice sample size too. A nice scientific 1. And LISTEN instead of trying to make up for your own selves to fit what you want it to be. Every group of women tries to beautify themselves in some way.

You want to fix the problem? Fix the perception of what goes on in black mens minds. Spread your hatred to them and leave the women alone. Direct your shit to the source instead of always attacking the afflicted.
 
:hmm:

Apply-for-a-Payday-Loan.jpg


korean-beauty-supply-store3.jpg




no plex bro, but let me know when other ethnicities start buying kinky (black) hair extensions for cosmetic enhancement

picture a cavebitch going into a shop asking for a bag of that virgin ashanti plus & igbo chic...

:cool:
my dude

First, there is no difference. Cosmetic "enhancements" are just that. The cultural significance attached to almost any of them is really in the eye of the beholder. That said, it's funny to me that you could even make that statement, given that basically the entire rest of the world imitates black culture. white bitches is paying tens of thousands of dollars for sisters asses and lips every fucking day. There's a not so new trend in Japan where they are buying products and processes specifically to Africanize the appearance of their hair.

Secondly, men have to stop projecting whatever the fuck they think onto women. Every time i hear a dude say a sister does xxx to her hair because she hates herself, i fucking cringe. Because it simply isn't that deep and it's a divisive statement.

Look at it this way, if a person that doesn't drink comes to a party and tells everybody with a cup in their hand that they are drinking that poison because they hate themselves, you'd be like nigga gtfoh.

I'd really love for just 1 of you to hit the street or something and ask all these women why they do their hair the way they do. Instead of just assuming what you want.

A nice sample size too. A nice scientific 1. And LISTEN instead of trying to make up for your own selves to fit what you want it to be. Every group of women tries to beautify themselves in some way.

Totally agree with this.

A muhfucka don't hate themselves just because YOU say they do. And if you refuse to listen to them and instead want to TELL them how they feel, you might need to check how YOU feel towards THEM.
 
:lol:

my chick hair cost me $1300 once last year

but she wouldn't be caught dead in this ratchetry going on here. plus her shit included a special keratin treatment and lasted about half a year.

ain't no ratchets ever been nowhere near where she get her shit done.

fixed?
 
Very racist thread. But I do know sisters that you would have to fight them to stop them from using weave. And they go thru a lot every month.

When I lived in Reno Nevada I use to have an afro comb or a pick stuck in my head every day. I seem to come from a different time period or different world or something.

It is something about a brother or sister remaining natural. Something that is swiftly becoming a thing of the past.

I am working to move from being a consumer to being a producer. Tried of wearing only the clothes they produce. They are neither comfortable or simple. And they surely do not reflect blackness.
This development of the Koreans making over 90 percent of their money off of blacks hating themselves and wanting to be some other race has got to stop. And I see a lot of sisters with good healthy hair but they are always gluing, weaving, or something. Sooner or later they may be dependent on that.

My hair was down below my shoulders and very healthy at one time. I do not know if it was heredity or anything. But I use to mess up real bad. Perms and jerry curls. Maybe I learned to late. I spend a lot of money trying to make my hair grow. Now that I see what is going on it is hard to get the afro back.

http://oneblacknation.webs.com/

http://blacknation.vpweb.com/default.html
 
my dude

First, there is no difference. Cosmetic "enhancements" are just that. The cultural significance attached to almost any of them is really in the eye of the beholder. That said, it's funny to me that you could even make that statement, given that basically the entire rest of the world imitates black culture. white bitches is paying tens of thousands of dollars for sisters asses and lips every fucking day. There's a not so new trend in Japan where they are buying products and processes specifically to Africanize the appearance of their hair.

Secondly, men have to stop projecting whatever the fuck they think onto women. Every time i hear a dude say a sister does xxx to her hair because she hates herself, i fucking cringe. Because it simply isn't that deep and it's a divisive statement.

Look at it this way, if a person that doesn't drink comes to a party and tells everybody with a cup in their hand that they are drinking that poison because they hate themselves, you'd be like nigga gtfoh.

i feel what you're saying - keep in mind however that i've personally never stated that black women "hated themselves" for getting weaves

i get why they do it - i talk with women everyday

it's the subconscious part that i've gotten girls to recognize. won't ever blame them for the diseased system that we're all infected by

stay up :cool:
 
:hmm:

Apply-for-a-Payday-Loan.jpg


korean-beauty-supply-store3.jpg




no plex bro, but let me know when other ethnicities start buying kinky (black) hair extensions for cosmetic enhancement

picture a cavebitch going into a shop asking for a bag of that virgin ashanti plus & igbo chic...

:cool:

Mexican chick at my job wears weave clips every day

She just showed me a pic of her korean friend getting a perm to make her hair curly...the perm machine looked like she was sitting in a tardis

Never underestimate the lengths any woman...regardless of color...will go thru for beauty
 
Where do I get weave from to sell???

Sent from Clayton County Department of Corrections using Pay Phone
 
Mexican chick at my job wears weave clips every day

She just showed me a pic of her korean friend getting a perm to make her hair curly...the perm machine looked like she was sitting in a tardis

Never underestimate the lengths any woman...regardless of color...will go thru for beauty
Perm machine? :confused:
Tardis? :dunno:
 
i feel what you're saying - keep in mind however that i've personally never stated that black women "hated themselves" for getting weaves

i get why they do it - i talk with women everyday

it's the subconscious part that i've gotten girls to recognize. won't ever blame them for the diseased system that we're all infected by

stay up :cool:

ALL my cousins are weaved up. I ask them why, and I usually hear

1) It protects my real hair;
2) It's hard for my hair to hold a style, especially in wet or humid weather;
3) It saves time; I don't have to take 45 minutes to do my hair in the morning;
4) Certain jobs don't allow natural black hairstyles;
5) I just like the way it looks.

I still think there is a "subconscious" part, as you say. Then again, I get lined up and edged up every two to three weeks because I don't like to walk around looking "dusty", so I can't judge anyone else.
 
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