Okay, so you know how everyone talks about Indian temple hair being this mystical, perfect hair? Girl, after wearing these Indian wavy clip-ins for six months straight, I finally get what all the fuss is about. Not gonna lie, the first time I ran my fingers through them, I literally stood there in my bathroom for five minutes just playing with the texture. It's this soft, natural wave that moves exactly like the beachy hair I've been trying to achieve with a curling wand for years.
Specifications
Feature | Details |
---|---|
Hair Type | 100% Human Hair Weave |
Texture | Naturally Wavy |
Color | Natural Black |
Length | 18"-22" |
Weight | 140 grams |
Grade | RAW |
Coloring | Can lift to a #613 |
Origin | From Temples in South East India |
Weft Construction | Machine Double Stitch |
Wefts & Clips | (2) 8-inch weft with 4 clips, (3) 6-inch weft with 3 clips, (2) 4-inch weft with 2 clips |
What Makes These Different
Real talk: I've tried clip-ins from everywhere. The synthetic ones that melted when I tried to curl them (disaster), the processed hair that tangled after two wears, even those super expensive European ones that honestly felt too silky for my texture. These Indian wavy ones? They're that perfect middle ground.
The waves are actually natural, not some chemical process that washes out after three shampoos. When I was doing hair professionally, we'd get clients asking for "effortless waves" and honestly, this is exactly that texture. It's not uniform like a curling iron pattern. Some pieces are wavier, some are almost straight, and that variation is what makes it look real. Because let's be honest, nobody's natural hair has perfect S-waves from root to tip.
Here's the thing about temple hair that nobody really explains: it's donated hair that's never been chemically processed. These specific extensions are RAW grade, which means they still have all their cuticles intact and aligned. That's why they don't tangle like crazy after a week. I've worn mine through windy days, gym sessions (yes, I wear my clip-ins to the gym sometimes, judge me), and they still look good.
The Technical Details You Actually Need
So the weight situation: 140 grams might seem light if you're used to those super thick 220-gram sets, but hear me out. For wavy hair, you actually want less density because the waves already create volume. Too much hair and you get that obvious "shelf" look where your natural hair ends and the extensions begin. With 140 grams of wavy hair, you get fullness without the helmet hair situation.
You get seven pieces total, which gives you options. Some days I just use the two big 8-inch wefts for subtle fullness. Date night? All seven pieces, baby. The clips are the standard kind, not seamless, but honestly for wavy hair I prefer regular clips. They grip better in textured hair and don't slip out when the waves start doing their own thing.
About that color range: these come in natural black, but the fact that they can lift to #613 blonde is actually insane for Indian hair. Most Indian hair maxes out at a caramel color before turning to mush. If you're thinking about highlights or balayage, these can handle it. Just use a good bond protector and don't try to do it all in one session.
Girl, Just Get Them
If you've been wanting that "I woke up like this" wavy texture but your natural hair is stubbornly straight (or stubbornly curly and you're tired of the maintenance), these are your answer. Premium temple hair quality, natural texture that actually lasts, and enough hair to make a difference without looking like you're wearing a costume.
The waves are buildable too. Scrunch them for more definition, brush them out for loose bends, or flat iron them straight when you want versatility. Your perfect beachy hair is literally seven clips away.