Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Hair dye question needs urgent answer?

I have been having my hair highlighted blond for bout a year and wanted it blonder to go on hol but the hairdresser turned it too light and ginger at the roots with a tinge all over. I did not have enough time to go back to hairdresses due to my hol so dyed it dark blond nice and easy semi perminant. It took really dark. after advice on here i bought a semi perminant dye colour remover and it went a bit lighter but not loads. Anyway i am now back from hol and my hair need doing again, i dont wanna go hairdressers anymore and have bough a l'oreal vanilla nat blond semi perminant, how will this work on my hair? Will it take? Will it look different at the roots? My hair is currently a golden brown.



Thanks



Hair dye question needs urgent answer?

I KNOW YOU DONT WANT TO BE TO TO TO BLOND WHY DONT YOU TRY TO FROST YOUR HAIR IT WORKS WELL AND YOUR HAIR WILL HAVE MULTI DIMENTIONS IT WILL BE PERFECT FOR WHAT YOU HAVE EXPLAINED.IT WILL ALSO BE MUCH LESS DAMAGING......



Hair dye question needs urgent answer?

Haircoloring is a mix of technique and art. Experiments rarely turn out nicely.



First, keep in mind for the future that you can only neutralise one colour at the time if you're not completely removing the colour with a special dye remover. These are not often found in drugstores however.



Also, keep in mind that the hairdresser will often use degrees of peroxide that are more potent than the one found in commercial dyes like L'Or鑼卆l, Clairol and Garnier use. These tend to be akin to 10 volumes peroxide.



And that just doesn't have a great deal of lightening power, especially not on a darker dye job.



My best advice would be to actually go to a hairdresser, because most likely you'll have huge colour build ups in your hair and eventually you're going to have your hair in many different colours after all these treatments.



If you don't do that, try to get a dye remover and follow the instructions. If you can't find it, then dump the oxide bottle from your dye box and buy stronger oxide. Try to do the hair in tiers and apply the dye by sections in order to put the dye on the roots last.



You can also try to leave it on longer than the required amount, ie something like 60 minutes and that sometimes cheats the amount of lightening you can get.



Another technique is to double the amount of dye you'd normally use and really saturate the hair with it.



But none of these methods will guarantee a nice result and might actually run up the cost of your dye job to what it would cost in a salon.

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