Red Flags vs. Normal Shed

Red Flags vs. Normal Shed

Red Flags vs. Normal Shed
Postpartum Hair 101

Red Flags vs. Normal Shed

How to tell typical postpartum shedding from signs that deserve a clinician visit. Simple markers in plain English.

Shop Fleur Postpartum Serum

Non hormonal • Lightweight feel • Built for daily use

What normal shed looks like

During pregnancy many hairs stayed in growth. After birth a larger group moves into rest, then releases together. The wave often feels strongest around weeks eight to sixteen and then eases. You may see more hair in the brush or drain and a bit more scalp at the part. Short new hairs along the hairline and crown usually follow over the next months.

Normal patterns and red flags

Normal patterns

Signs that fit the common timeline

  • Shedding rises between weeks eight and sixteen then begins to ease
  • Short new hairs by months four to six
  • Even thinning across the scalp rather than distinct bare patches
  • No scalp pain, burning, or swelling
Red flags

Good reasons to talk to a clinician

  • Patchy or circular areas of loss
  • Visible redness, scaling, pimples, or tenderness on the scalp
  • Shedding that does not ease after about six months
  • Sudden dramatic loss that feels out of proportion to the usual wave
  • Possible thyroid signs like fatigue that will not lift, heat or cold sensitivity, or heart rate changes
  • Possible iron concerns like unusual tiredness, brittle nails, or frequent headaches
  • Recent illness, high fever, major surgery, or new medicines around the time shedding increased

If you are worried or unsure, checking in is always reasonable.

Support the shed window gently

A light, non hormonal peptide serum made for nightly use during postpartum.

See Ingredients & How to Use

Clean scalp first • A few drops on the part • 2 minutes

Fast self checks

Strand check

Shed vs breakage

  • Shed hair: full length with a tiny white bulb at one end. Common during the wave
  • Breakage: shorter piece with no bulb and often frayed. Lower heat and tension and detangle from the ends
Photo track

One photo a month

Pick one part line. Use the same light and distance. Compare month one, three, and six. This tells a clearer story than daily checks.

Make progress with micro habits

Two minutes a night beats weekend overhauls. Keep the bottle by the sink and repeat.

Start Your 90-Day Postpartum Reset

Judge progress at 90 days • Monthly part line photo

When to seek care now

Do not wait if you see

  • Rapid patchy loss or sudden bare spots
  • Scalp pain, swelling, or pus filled bumps
  • Severe itching with flaking that does not improve
  • Ongoing heavy shedding past six months after birth

What to bring to your visit

Your notes

Helpful details

  • When shedding started and when it felt strongest
  • Any related health changes like birth recovery, illness, fever, or new medicines
  • Family history of hair conditions if known
Photos

Simple visual record

  • Three photos of the same part line from month one, three, and six
  • Any close ups of patches or irritated areas if present
Questions

Good questions to ask

  • Does this look like typical postpartum shed or something else
  • Do you recommend blood work for iron or thyroid
  • What care plan fits my current routine and goals

How to use Fleur during postpartum

Order matters

Cleanse → Calm → Signal

Wash with a gentle shampoo. Keep the scalp comfortable. Apply Fleur’s peptide serum to clean scalp before styling so the signal reaches the root.

Low tension

Protect new growth

Rotate ponytails. Use soft ties or a claw clip. Detangle from the ends. Keep heat brief and cool.

Consistency

Two minute night habit

  1. Part and apply: make four to six lines and place a few drops along each
  2. Spread gently: use fingertips only and avoid hard rubbing
  3. Protect ends: add a light leave in on the lengths if needed

Ready when the wave hits

A simple nightly step to support the look of density while cycles normalize.

Shop Fleur Postpartum Serum

Non hormonal • Easy to layer • No greasy feel

Good to know

This page is for education. It is not a diagnosis or a treatment plan. If your signs match the red flags above, or you are worried, a clinician visit is the right next step.