Dajuja
DAJUJA is a Korean hair-tools brand, and that is what fills this page: roll brushes, the Donmo brush series, forking and gold-thorn brushes, plus a few salon extras like a recovery hair cream, clip-style hairpins, and even nitrile gloves. We list 20+ items, most of them brushes built for blow-drying, volumising, and styling. If you are after brushes and styling kit rather than skincare, this is the right shelf.
By Skinsli editorial Updated
Buying guide
DAJUJA hair brushes and tools: how to choose
DAJUJA is a Korean brand that makes hair-styling tools, mostly brushes. The selection here is built around roll brushes and the Donmo brush line, with a handful of salon extras such as a recovery hair cream, clip hairpins, and disposable gloves. This guide explains the brush types on this page, how to match one to your hair and the look you want, and what the non-brush items are for.
What DAJUJA is
DAJUJA makes hair tools rather than skincare or makeup. Almost everything on this page is a brush: roll brushes for blow-drying, the numbered Donmo brushes, forking brushes, and gold-thorn variants. Alongside the brushes there is a Recovery Charging Hair Cream, a set of Penguin clip hairpins, and a box of nitrile gloves, which together point to a brand that supplies working salon kit as much as home styling. If you came here for face care, this is not the right page; if you want brushes and styling gear, read on.
Roll brushes and what they do
The Prickly Roll Hair Brush, the Speed Entic Roll Donmobrush, and the Gold Forking Roll Brush No. 5 are all round, barrel-style brushes. A roll brush is the tool you use with a hairdryer to add volume at the roots and a soft curl at the ends. You wrap a section of hair around the barrel, pull it taut, and follow it with the dryer; the heat sets the shape as the hair cools on the brush. Larger barrels give a loose, smooth bend and work well on long hair, while smaller barrels create a tighter curl and more lift, which suits shorter styles and fringes.
The Donmo brush series
Several products here carry the Donmo name, including Donmo Brush No. 3 and No. 4 and the Donmo Forking Hair Brush in gold. A numbered series like this usually steps through sizes or bristle densities, so the number tells you where the brush sits in the range rather than naming a different tool entirely. Pick a lower number for a smaller, more precise brush and a higher number for a fuller one. If you already like one Donmo brush, staying inside the series is a safe way to add a second size without guessing at how it will behave.
Forking and thorn brushes
The Gold Thorn Brush No. 1 and the forking brushes use stiffer, more widely spaced bristles. Brushes described as "forking" or "thorn" are built to grip and separate hair, which helps with detangling, backcombing for volume, and working product through thicker or coarser hair. They are less about a smooth blow-dry finish and more about control and lift. If your hair is dense or you tend to tease it for height, one of these earns its place next to a roll brush rather than replacing it.
Matching a brush to your hair
Start with what you want the brush to do. For a bouncy blow-dry with movement, a round roll brush is the core tool, sized to your hair length. For detangling and volume at the root, a forking or thorn brush handles the grip. Fine or fragile hair generally does better with softer, more flexible bristles and a gentler hand, while thick or curly hair can take the stiffer thorn and forking styles. Many people end up owning two: a roll brush for the finish and a sturdier brush for prep and lift.
How to blow-dry with a roll brush
Work on hair that is towel-dried and no longer dripping. Split it into sections and clip away what you are not working on. Wrap one section around the barrel, keep gentle tension, and run the dryer along the brush from root to tip, following the heat with the brush so the hair takes the brush's shape. Let each section cool on the barrel for a moment before you unwind it, because hair sets as it cools. A clip such as the Penguin hairpins is handy here for holding sections out of the way while you work.
The hair cream, clips, and gloves
Not everything here is a brush. The Recovery Charging Hair Cream, a 200g tub, is a leave-in or treatment cream meant to soften and condition hair, and it pairs naturally with heat styling since blow-drying is hard on the hair shaft. The Penguin Clip Hairpins Set gives you six sectioning clips, the small but genuinely useful tool that makes a tidy blow-dry possible. The black nitrile gloves in size M, sold a hundred to a box, are salon supplies, the kind used during colour or treatment work rather than for styling.
Sizing and value
Brushes here are sold individually, so think about which one job you most need covered before adding a second. The hair cream comes in a single 200g tub, the hairpins as a six-piece set, and the gloves as a 100-sheet box, so those are buy-once items that last. If you are building a styling kit from scratch, a roll brush plus a pack of sectioning clips is the practical starting pair; add a thorn or forking brush later if your hair needs more grip than a round brush gives.
Buying DAJUJA and what to check
These are Korean-made tools, so buy from a seller that sources them directly to be sure the build quality matches what the brand intends; bristle quality and barrel construction are what separate a brush that lasts from one that sheds or warps under a hot dryer. Check the exact brush number and barrel size before you order, since the Donmo and roll ranges step through sizes and the right one depends on your hair length. For the consumables, confirm the pack count, the hair cream is one tub and the gloves come a hundred to a box.
FAQ
Frequently asked questions
FAQ
Frequently asked questions
What does DAJUJA make?
DAJUJA is a Korean hair-tools brand. The range we list is mostly brushes, including roll brushes for blow-drying, the numbered Donmo brush series, and forking and gold-thorn brushes, plus a few salon extras such as the Recovery Charging Hair Cream, Penguin clip hairpins, and a box of nitrile gloves. It is hair-styling kit, not skincare.
Which DAJUJA brush is best for a blow-dry?
A round roll brush, such as the Prickly Roll Hair Brush, the Speed Entic Roll Donmobrush, or the Gold Forking Roll Brush No. 5. You wrap a section around the barrel and follow it with the dryer to add root volume and a soft bend at the ends. Pick a larger barrel for long hair and a smooth finish, or a smaller one for tighter curl and more lift on shorter styles.
What do the Donmo brush numbers mean?
The numbers step through the series, so they generally indicate size or bristle density rather than naming completely different tools. A lower number, like Donmo Brush No. 3, tends to be smaller and more precise; a higher number is fuller. If you already get on with one Donmo brush, staying in the series is the safe way to add a second size.
What are the forking and thorn brushes for?
The Gold Thorn Brush No. 1 and the forking brushes have stiffer, more widely spaced bristles built to grip and separate hair. That makes them good for detangling, backcombing for volume, and working product through thick or coarse hair. They handle prep and lift rather than the smooth finish you get from a round roll brush, so many people own one of each.
What are the hair cream, clips, and gloves for?
The Recovery Charging Hair Cream is a 200g conditioning treatment that pairs well with heat styling, since blow-drying stresses the hair. The Penguin Clip Hairpins Set is six sectioning clips for holding hair out of the way while you style. The black nitrile gloves in size M, a hundred to a box, are salon supplies for colour or treatment work rather than styling tools.















