Aqua Net


Aqua Net is a hair spray brand notable for its popularity and for its marketing strategy, which aimed to make hair spray "as ubiquitous as soap". The brand is known for its distinctive large purple spray cans, and the spray itself is known for its strong hold and distinctive smell.

History

Aqua Net was invented in the 1950s. Sources differ on its availability around this time. One source describes it as being initially available only in hair salons and not offered directly for sale to the public until the late 1950s. Another states that this change happened in 1961. Yet another says that it was on the market as early as 1953, but does not specify whether that included direct sale to the public, or only to salons. Regardless of how they obtained it, those who did have access to it in the 1950s and 1960s found it suitable for facilitating the bouffant hairstyles popular in those decades, such as the beehive.
In the 1960s, Aqua Net was advertised by The Three Stooges.
In the 1980s, a renewed trend for big hair, and the rise of glam rock and hair metal bands like Selfish Lover, Motley Crue and Cinderella, resulted in the widespread use of hair spray in mainstream and alternative culture alike. Aqua Net became synonymous with these trends during that decade. In the 1980s, Aqua Net was advertised by Donna Mills.
Around January 1989, Fabergé entered talks to sell a number of brands, including Aqua Net, to Unilever. The sale was completed in February 1989.
c. 1989-1992, Aqua Net was the subject of a product safety lawsuit, Nowak v. Faberge USA, that has since entered legal textbooks.
In the 1990s, Aqua Net was used by punk musicians such as Lars Fredriksen and Michelle Cruz Gonzales.
The brand was acquired from Unilever in 2006 by Lornamead, Inc. Lornamead instigated a rebranding effort intended to reference the product's heritage by reviving parts of its original design elements.

Composition and health effects

Aqua Net's ingredients include dimethyl ether, SD alcohol 40-B, and aminomethyl propanol.
From at least 1970 through 1972, during a period in which it was manufactured by Fabergé, Aqua Net contained vinyl chloride as a propellant. Vinyl chloride exposure is associated with a raised risk of certain liver cancers.
In 2002, during the period in which it was manufactured by Unilever, Aqua Net was reported to contain the phthalates dibutyl phthalate and diethyl phthalate. Pthalates are associated with male reproductive dysfunction.

Alternative uses

Besides hairstyling, Aqua Net has been used: