Box. Boho. Knotless. Most Black women understand exactly what those words refer to: braided hairstyles. The thousand-year-old ritual is practically a rite of passage, and many Black women and girls even today sit in salon chairs, up to 12 hours at a stretch, as a stylist weaves patterns into their hair.
But that’s also the problem. For thousands of years, hair braiding has been a manual task. Until recently, that is. Speaking to TechCrunch, Yinka Ogunbiyi recalled when she was stuck alone in her London apartment during the COVID-19 pandemic and tried braiding her own hair: “It took me four days,” she said.
Ogunbiyi, who has an MS in engineering from Harvard as well as an MBA, had previously founded a smart cooking appliance company, and started looking at braiding as a technical problem to be solved.
After years of research, on Tuesday, she launched a robotics startup: HaloBraid aims to help salons speed up braiding with its first device, slated to launch later this year, that acts as a braiding assistant for professional stylists. The company has raised $7 million in a seed round led by Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian’s venture firm, Seven Seven Six.
Ogunbiyi didn’t go into much detail about the device, as she said there are still patents pending, but she did explain how it works: A stylist starts the braiding and then hands off the process to HaloBraid, which can finish the rest of the braid in seconds. She noted that the product is meant to be gentle on the hair, and that it can help finish both knotless and box braids.
HaloBraid’s hair-braiding device Image Credits:HaloBraid
In her research, Ogunbiyi found that people spend an estimated 8 billion hours braiding hair each year. She said in her survey of 2,000 …