Kerastase Chronologiste
Kerastase Chronologiste

When I was actually in the shower with this little lot, I wasn’t exactly loving it. In particular, the Pre Shampoo which is an exfoliating treatment for the scalp. The instructions suggest that you massage this into your scalp and hair for a full five minutes. Unless you’ve got biceps of steel, this is quite a big ask although as an exercise for bingo wings, I’d imagine it’s rather effective. Minutes one and two are fine but thereafter, it’s quite a challenge! A bit like when you go for a really long swim when you haven’t been near water for months… that wobbly leg thing. Only with arms. Personally, I’d ditch this treatment – unless you’ve got specific scalp issues, you won’t really need it.

Kerastase Chronologiste
Kerastase Chronologiste

The Kerastase Chronologiste shampoo feels very rich – a bit too rich actually, and I was worried that I wouldn’t be able to get it out of my hair. Key learing on this one is that you don’t need very much! Even after significant rinsing, I wasn’t sure it was all out.

Kerastase Chronologiste
Kerastase Chronologiste

Finally, the conditioning mask. Again, it feels more luxurious in texture than other Kerastase masks that I’ve tried but seemed to rinse away fairly well. But, oh my! Once I’d blow dried my hair, the shine was incredible. I would honestly say that it’s the shiniest and bounciest my hair has ever been and that shine lasted a full two days before it started to fade down. The results more than outweighed the faff.



The Kerastase Chronologiste range, unlike other Kerastase products, is for all hair types. Kerastase is my favourite hair brand – I never get the same results with other brands and always, always go back to it as my preference. Hair care brands are often the worst at hype – more than skin care, I’d say – but this is living up to its claims, at least for my hair. If my hair was very oily, I might think differently, I must admit.

So, Kerastase Chronologiste contains a multitude of lipids, vitamins (A and E), ceramides, antioxidants and silicone. There’s much made of a ‘caviar’ ingredient which isn’t really caviar so don’t worry – I think it just sounds more luxurious. As you’d expect, Kerastase Chronologiste is expensive. The pre-shampoo is £28.50, the shampoo is £23 and the mask is £32. I’m quite price conscious, and know this is crazy money for shampoos and conditioners, but truly, I’d buy the shampoo and the mask in a heartbeat to have on hand for when hair just needs to look amazing (it’s HERE). If I wanted to include the scalp exfoliating option, I’d probably book for a salon treatment (HERE) and let someone else’s arms take the strain! Easier I think to massage for five minutes on someone else’s head than your own.

The Kerastase Chronologiste range is a massive recommend by me – even at that price.

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