>>4684263>>No wonder why it lost it's curl if you conditioned it :/Anon, you need to shut the fuck up immediately. You also need to refrain from advising anyone on wig maintenance or repair at any point in the future, because you know NOTHING.
I mean that. Nothing.
Wig hair is plastic. Human shampoo cannot fuck it up. Human conditioner cannot fuck it up. Neither of them can penetrate the shaft or change its properties IN ANY WAY.
The list of things you can put on wig hair without causing any change at all could reach the moon and back. The list of things that WILL cause changes in wig fiber can be written on the back of your hand with a fat-tip Sharpie, and you can't get most of them. The stuff you can get smells awful and you wouldn't want to use it anyway: acetone, gasoline, and kerosene. Other than those things, heat and UV are pretty much it.
Wig shampoo and conditioner are overpriced rip-offs, completely unnecessary. To wash a wig you want a basic liquid soap: use any cheap dish soap. Conditioning a wig is a misuse of the term, since as previously noted your product will not be penetrating the plastic's surface. But you can find a product that will coat the plastic with a slippery compound, and for this you want something with silicone. Most human hair conditioners have it, but some don't. You want something that has plenty of silicone and none of the oils/moisturizers in human conditioner that are useless to your wig and will make it dull and clumpy. You want the can from the hardware store that says "SILICONE LUBRICANT SPRAY". That can and the dish soap will cost about as much as the shampoo and conditioner and they will actually work. Use them.
And remember that wig fiber is made out of plastic. Please. For the love of god, just remember that one thing. You are unqualified to tell anyone anything about wigs until you understand that.