

🔒 Lock your look, own the moment.
Eclipse Hair Fiber Holding Spray is a 4 fl oz paraben-free spray designed to secure hair building fibers against wind, rain, and sweat. Its fine mist pump ensures easy, precise application while creating a natural, flake-free finish that strengthens fiber-to-hair bonds. Suitable for both men and women, it offers humidity resistance and a polished look for thinning hair and beards.










| ASIN | B00IY0JXI8 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #176,902 in Beauty & Personal Care ( See Top 100 in Beauty & Personal Care ) #1,673 in Hair Sprays |
| Brand Name | ECLIPSE INSTANT HAIR FILLER |
| Customer Reviews | 4.2 out of 5 stars 137 Reviews |
| Hair Type | Thin |
| Item Form | Spray |
| Item Height | 6.1 inches |
| Item Volume | 4 Fluid Ounces |
| Item Weight | 0.21 Pounds |
| Liquid Volume | 4 Fluid Ounces |
| Manufacturer | Beauty Group LLC |
| Material Type Free | Paraben Free |
| Number of Items | 1 |
| Product Benefits | Humidity Resistant, Shape & Hold |
| Scent | Natural |
| Scent Name | Natural |
| UPC | 852741004775 |
| Unit Count | 4 Fluid Ounces |
L**D
The only hair setting spray that doesn’t make your flake
My beard grows but is not full in the middle. After much research I find by using hair fibers. The setting spray is the only product that makes my beard look natural. It doesn’t make my beard flakey and although there is some shedding it is far less than the competition. Elevate Hair Fiber Locking & Setting Spray is my go to. Listen I will be late to a function until I find my locking spray. It works! Period!
R**T
Reasonably priced, locks fibers in place
Works great. Read other reviews where they claim the spray stream is too strong. Comes out in a fine, soft mist in the bottle I purchased so possibly a defective bottle or they're applying way too much force when spraying. Reasonably priced as well. Would recommend.
R**.
Goes well with the fibers
This works well with the Eclipse Hair Fibers, which are great! My hairdresser recommended them. You don't need the spray in order to use the hair fibers, but only if you can afford both. Otherwise, you can use hairspray
F**S
yes I like it because I have very thin hair and bald ...
I have been using this for years and bought it at the beauty shop. but I changed beauty shops and found it on Amazon. yes I like it because I have very thin hair and bald areas and this product hides it all.
K**K
Good holding spray
Provides a good hold and I also use it to hold my curls. Nice smell too.
U**6
Overpriced, annnd.... Getting It Out Of The Bottle Would Be A Big Help
This is just a hairspray and does what hairspray is supposed to do - hold hair in place - and no complaints there. This stuff is fine in that regard, and the people complaining that it "clumps" are complaining about their own tendency toward overdoing it, not anything that's wrong with the formulation. There are two real problems with this product though: It's overpriced, and the design fiasco that is the spray pump makes much of the product useless. This is 4 ounces for fourteen bucks, which works out to $3.50 an ounce; even a medium-quality aerosol spray like Paul Mitchell's Awapuhi finishing spray is 9.1 at $22, or $2.42 an ounce. So there's no advantage to buying this stuff even in the best of conditions. But the real kicker is that the finger-pump they put on these bottles must be from the most dirt-cheap bargain-basement supplier this company could find, because you will need to shoot a bunch of raindrop-sized splatter of this stuff onto your face, your shoulders, your clothing and the floor before the thing finally "primes" and actually atomizes the liquid into a fine enough spray to be useful for hair. And once that's done, you have to keep pumping to keep it "primed," or you're back to Square One. But at some point the pump is just going to give out on you anyway, and that's even before the liquid level gets low enough to cause "Intake-tube-end is not submerged enough" problems. You get to something like 1/3 remaining in the bottle and the sprayer will just flatly refuse to work. 'Don't matter if you soak it in hot water or blow it out with a pressure-washer, the trash-quality mechanism will just refuse to work. Since any kind of hair spray needs to be in a sprayed form to be applied, what you have from that point is a plastic bottle of inaccessible and therefore useless liquid. So let's do the math: 1/3 of 4 ounces is 1.333 ounces; 4 minus 1.333 is 2.667. So fourteen bucks divided by 2.667 ounces of usable product (not counting the face/clothes/floor splatter wasted while priming the cheapo pump,) works out to roughly $5.25 per ounce. Which works out to around $699.40 a gallon. Such a deal. If they got a usable delivery system for this and lopped off a buck or two from the price I might buy it again, but until then, there are far more cost-efficient (and aggravation-efficient) competitors available.
N**I
It really works as described!!
It smells really nice and it holds the hair in place. It does not leaves a white residue on the hair like other hair sprays do.
A**.
Strong stream not conducive to fiber locking!
The spray is strong, as in meant for sending a strong stream of liquid to the hair. I don't see how the velocity of the liquid stream can hold anything. Wash everything out, maybe.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
4 days ago