QUESTION IMAGE
Question
question 4 (1 point)
if a cosmetologist observes that a clients face has a wide jaw and chin line with a narrow forehead, which face shape does the client have?
a oval
b inverted triangle
c triangular
d oblong
question 5 (1 point)
which description is true of very curly, fine hair?
a very curly, fine hair responds well to a blowdryer and thermal flat iron.
b very curly, fine hair responds well to blowdrying with various brush sizes.
c blowdrying can be effective on very curly, fine hair, but is often easier for the stylist than for the client.
d very curly, fine hair cannot be straightened by blowdrying.
question 6 (1 point)
a stylist is preparing to perform a permanent waving chemical service on a client with straight, coarse hair. the last time the stylist performed this service with the client, the results were not satisfactory, as the hair did not curl as much as was intended. which of the following is a consideration the stylist should take into account before performing this service again?
a the client’s hair pattern and texture are moisture resistant, so the chemical service may take longer to process.
b the client’s hair pattern and texture are responsive to blowdrying, so to maintain the curl, blowdrying should be kept to a minimum.
c the client’s hair pattern and texture respond well to rollers and thermal styling, so these techniques should be used in place of a chemical service.
d the client’s hair pattern and texture are voluminous, so to maintain the curl, some interior weight should be removed with texture shears.
Question 4
To determine the face shape, we analyze each option:
- Oval: Balanced proportions, not wide jaw with narrow forehead.
- Inverted triangle: Wide forehead, narrow jaw (opposite of the description).
- Triangular: Wide jaw/chin and narrow forehead, matching the observation.
- Oblong: Long and narrow, not related to jaw/forehead width contrast.
Analyze each option for very curly, fine hair:
- Option a: Fine, curly hair is fragile; thermal styling (flat iron) can damage it, so this is false.
- Option b: Using various brush sizes for blowdrying fine, curly hair can cause breakage or frizz, not ideal.
- Option c: Blowdrying can work, but stylists have more control (easier for them than clients), which is true.
- Option d: It can be straightened with blowdrying (with care), so "cannot be" is false.
For straight, coarse hair in permanent waving:
- Option a: Coarse hair can be moisture - resistant, so chemical processing (permanent wave) may take longer to achieve desired curl (since last time curl was insufficient, this explains and is a valid consideration).
- Option b: Blowdrying's relation to maintaining curl is not relevant to why the last perm was insufficient.
- Option c: The question is about improving the perm service, not replacing it with other styling.
- Option d: Removing interior weight with shears is for styling, not related to the perm's chemical processing issue.
Snap & solve any problem in the app
Get step-by-step solutions on Sovi AI
Photo-based solutions with guided steps
Explore more problems and detailed explanations
c. triangular