For salons & stylists

Salon Stock: Natural Wave Closures

Natural Wave lace closures are a practical salon-stock item when your clients regularly request sew-ins, protective styles, and parting coverage in a soft wave texture. Prarvi helps stylists build a reorderable closure lane by matching texture family, base size, shade, and compatible wefts before you commit to larger inventory.

Consistent stock, consistent results

Closure consistency matters most when a client returns for the same look. Stocking the same Natural Wave texture family across closures and wefts helps the parting area, density, and finished style read as one install instead of two different products placed together.

Wholesale pricing by consultation

Salon and stylist pricing is shared privately after a short consultation — there is no public price list.

What to confirm before stocking closures

Before buying in volume, confirm the closure size, lace type, shade range, and matching weft texture you plan to use most often. If your clients vary between natural black, brown, grey blending, or blonde services, start with samples or a smaller trial order so the salon can validate the match in real lighting.

Best fit for repeat salon work

This page is best for stylists who already know Natural Wave is part of their service menu and want a dependable closure source. If you are still comparing textures, begin with samples or a single client order before building a stock plan.

Should a salon stock closures before testing the texture?

If Natural Wave is new to your service menu, start with a sample or a small client order first. Once the texture, shade, and base work for your clientele, a reorder plan is safer than buying several closures blindly.

How should closures be matched with wefts?

Choose the weft texture first, then match the closure from the same texture family and shade range. This keeps the crown or parting area from looking separate from the rest of the install.

Is wholesale pricing public?

No. Salon and stylist pricing is shared after a short consultation because texture, quantity, shade, reorder frequency, and timeline all affect the recommendation.