Mushrooms are the wellness trend du jour, turning up in coffee, supplements and even beer. Now, consumers are being told to slather them on their heads after Dyson revealed they could be a secret weapon in the age-old battle with frizzy hair.
Dyson researchers have discovered that fungal chitosan â which is found in the cell walls of oyster mushrooms and commonly used in skincare products â can be used to tame unruly hair.
Named after this âheroâ ingredient, Chitosan will go on sale in the companyâs stores and on its website on Tuesday. Customers will have to dig deep â the styling cream and serum, which Dyson claims âreduces frizz by up to 50 percentâ, both cost £50 ($66) for 100ml.
Chitosan is âdelicate yet strong, itâs what gives the fungi its shape and provides the basis of Dysonâs flexible hold,â the company said.
Its engineers have ârigorously tested to find the optimum percentage of chitosan for all-day, flexible hold, while maintaining natural movement.â The company added that each bottle âharnesses the power of up to eight oyster mushrooms.â
âWhilst some other styling products use simple polymers that stick the strands of hair together like glue. Dysonâs formulas work differently,â said James Dyson, who remains the companyâs chief engineer. âThe complex macromolecule helps create flexible bonds that support hair strand by strand, for twice the hold, with movement and shine.â
The company, which since its founding by the British inventor James Dyson in 1991 has made billions from innovations including bagless vacuum cleaners to bladeless fans, has in recent years been trying to conquer the lucrative beauty market with products such as a âsupersonicâ hairdryer.
Dyson is not the only company attempting to cash in on fungi â with the ingredient turning up in so many products that the consumer champion group Which? was compelled to look into the evidence base for the âmushroom maniaâ sweeping the high street.
Describing some mushroom products on sale in health food shops, the group said: âWhile they do have potential benefits, there isnât enough evidence yet to suggest they work, and the vast majority donât have authorised health claims in the UK.â
By Zoe Wood
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