A question that stumps even the most product-savvy among us: does my hair need moisture or strength? The answer depends on what’s actually happening inside your hair, not on the surface. Getting it right makes the difference between a mask that transforms your texture and one that barely registers. Here’s how to choose.
What Hydrating Masks Do
A hydrating mask’s job is to replenish water and lipids in the hair’s cortex. It also seals the cuticle to lock all that wonderful moisture in.
When hair is dehydrated, the cuticle lifts, thereby exposing the inner layers to further moisture loss. Hydrating masks reverse that cycle by flooding the hair with emollients and humectants, then smoothing the cuticle closed.
You need a hydrating mask if your hair is:
- Naturally dry, thick, or coarse-textured
- Curly or coily (these textures are inherently drier because sebum doesn’t travel easily along the curl pattern)
- Dealing with environmental dryness from winter air, indoor heating, or sun exposure
- Rough, frizzy, or tangled even when it hasn’t been chemically treated
The All Soft Heavy Cream Mask is built for exactly this. This mask is a deep conditioning hair treatment formulated with the highest percentage of Redken's Moisture Complex with Argan Oil. Prescribed for dry, brittle hair, this deep conditioning mask dramatically transforms the feel and appearance of hair by replenishing hair's moisture.
What Strengthening Masks Do
A strengthening mask targets the internal structure of the hair, specifically the disulfide bonds that hold the fiber together. When those bonds break (from bleach, color, heat, or mechanical stress), the strand loses its structural integrity. It becomes elastic, weak, and prone to snapping. A strengthening mask reinforces those bonds from the inside out.
You need a strengthening mask if your hair is:
- Color-treated, highlighted, or bleached
- Regularly heat-styled at high temperatures
- Breaking off in short pieces (visible breakage at mid-shaft or ends)
- Losing elasticity: it stretches when wet and doesn’t bounce back
The Acidic Bonding Concentrate 5-Minute Mask is the mask salon pros reach for when bond damage is the concern. It is an ultra-conditioning mask that provides deep hydration and deep repair. In just 5 minutes, this mask melts into hair to not only coat, but repair hair damage deep inside the hair.
Does Your Hair Need Moisture, Strength, or Both?
If you’re not sure which category your hair falls into, look for these signs.
- Your Hair Needs Moisture: You’ve got persistent frizz even in low-humidity conditions, plus, rough or straw-like texture when dry. Its dull appearance doesn't respond to shine products and tangles easily even when handled gently. Your hair feels dry to the touch.
- Your Hair Needs Strength: Your hair deals with excessive breakage (short pieces on your clothes, pillow, or brush). You’ve got high elasticity when wet (stretches like a rubber band, then snaps). It feels limp or mushy when saturated with water. There is visible thinning at the ends despite consistent length at the roots. Your hair feels weak to the touch. Most chemically treated and heat-styled hair needs both. That’s the reality for the majority of people reading this. Color processing and bleaching break bonds (requiring strength) while also stripping moisture (requiring hydration). The fix isn’t choosing just one. It’s using both in a strategic rotation.
How to Use Both in Your Weekly Routine
Here’s the approach salon professionals recommend for hair that needs both moisture and strength.
- For Heavily Processed or Damaged Hair: Use the Acidic Bonding Concentrate 5-Minute Mask as your primary weekly treatment. Bond repair is the foundation; without structural integrity, moisture won’t hold anyway. Add a hydrating treatment with the All Soft Moisture Restore as a monthly boost when dryness is pronounced.
- For Moderately Processed Hair: Alternate weekly. One week, use the Acidic Bonding Concentrate 5-Minute Mask for strength. The next week, use a deeply hydrating mask or moisture like the All Soft Heavy Cream Mask. This keeps the protein-moisture balance in check without overloading in either direction.
- For Natural, Unprocessed Hair: Lead with hydrating treatments most weeks. Add the ABC mask once or twice a month as maintenance, especially if you heat-style regularly. Regardless of which mask you’re using, apply from mid-lengths to ends only. Let it process for the recommended time (five minutes for the ABC mask). Rinse thoroughly, and layer your leave-in treatment afterward.
The mask question isn’t really about applying moisture or strength. For most of us, it’s both, in the right balance, at the right time. Start by diagnosing what your hair needs right now. Build a rotation that covers both, and adjust as your hair responds.
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