I am in the middle of a draft for my final essay I would like to know what you think and if you think there is something that should be added, deleted, or changed please tell me. This essay is a compare/contrast essay about flat irons and curling irons. I only have the introduction and first paragraph finished.
Flat Irons VS. Curling Irons
Do you have trouble deciding what heated styling utensil will be best for your hair? Both the curling iron and flat iron offer diversity with their styles, tips, results, damage affects, and amount of time each take for completing your desired look. The flat iron also known as a hair straightener is a hair tool that is designed to straighten a person’s hair, there are different ways in which they work. A hair straightener is made with two flat plates that heat up to create the style you want; they come with different plate sizes for different types of hair. Curling irons also called curling tongs are hair tools that use heat for rolling hair into curls; they can create many types of curls with different sizes. There are, spring curling irons have a clip to hold the bottom of your hair as you roll up, with clipless curling irons you wrap the top of your hair around the barrel all the way up to the roots, Marcel curling irons have two handles that make curling your hair quicker but harder, Spiral/Ribbon curling irons have raised ridges so you can guide your hair around quickly and easily, last is the double/triple barrel curling irons create figure 8 loops and waves very quickly because you can use large sections of hair at a time. Although both products appear similar, a closer look at the main details reveals the flat iron as the more effective hair care tool.
There are many different style options you can choose, for the flat iron as well as the curling iron. Both of the utensils can curl and wave your hair flat iron curls tend to be loose, big and don’t normally last that long, curling iron curls can be tight, loose, big, or little and can last for a while, the waves from both utensils look similar when all of your hair is finished. Flat irons are best used for straightening hair but as you read a little bit ago they can also create waves, curls, and eliminate frizz. When styling your hair you need to have the correct plate size, the size you choose depends on your hair type and length. If your hair is thick, coarse, curly you will need an iron that’s 1-1 ½ in. (short hair), 1-2 in. (medium hair), or 1 ½-2 in. (long hair). For normal, medium, wavy hair your iron size will need to be ½ -1 ¼ in. (short hair), 1-1 ½ in. (medium hair), or 1 ¼-2 in. (long hair). If you have thin, fine hair it doesn't matter what size flat iron you use. Curling irons as you read earlier don’t only create curls but also waves. There are different kinds of curls; the one you want will depend on the length of your hair, barrel size, and the curling iron you decide to use. Pencil thin curls need a 3/8 in. barrel, short-medium hair, and a spring curling iron, Shirley Temple curls need a 1/2-5/8 in. barrel, short-medium hair, and a spiral curling iron, classic coil curls need a 1 in. barrel, medium hair, and a spring curling iron, long looping curls need a 1 1/4 in. barrel, medium-long hair, and a spring curling iron, big round curls (Victoria Secret curls) need a 1 1/2+ in. barrel, medium-long hair, and a clipless, Marcel, or spiral/ribbon curling iron, last is loose flowing “S” shaped waves you’ll need a 2+ in. barrel, long hair, and a double/triple barrel or clipless curling iron.
3 answers
Compare it to this: http://www.shopwiki.com/w/Curling-Irons
I fully understand that the definition of "essay" has over the years been very vague. But so far, you have avoided personal reflections, learned arguments, criticism.
<Essays can consist of a number of elements, including: literary criticism, political manifestos, learned arguments, observations of daily life, recollections, and reflections of the author. So it now reads much like a buying guide.
Repost it later. For info, normally, the introduction and thesis paragraph is the last thing you should write in an essay.
Good luck.
In addition to the good link he gave you re writing an essay, here's this for writing comparison/contrast ~
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Whenever you are writing a comparison/contrast paper (paragraph, essay, research paper), you need to plan it out very carefully on paper first.
Try this:
1. Write all the information about one of your topics on one page.
2. Write all the information about the other topic on another page.
3. Then put them together in this order:
1. Intro
2. All about topic A
~~~2A. detail 1
~~~2B. detail 2
~~~2C. detail 3
~~~2D. detail 4
~~~2E. detail 5
3. All about topic B
~~~3A. detail 1
~~~3B. detail 2
~~~3C. detail 3
~~~3D. detail 4
~~~3E. detail 5
4. Concl.
The number of details for each topic will vary depending on your main points. I would include comparisons (how they are similar) in the introduction and conclusion, but sections 2 and 3 and all those details will be stating and explaining how they are different.
There are two recognized patterns for writing comparison/contrast papers. One is casually referred to as "zig-zag,” but can be very confusing for the reader if you don’t use transitions effectively. The other is topic-by-topic (which is what I've outlined above) and is much easier for the reader to follow.
See http://leo.stcloudstate.edu/acadwrite/comparcontrast.html for further help with comparison/contrast writing.
Once you have organized your information, please re-post if you’d like feedback from someone here.