At-home Hair Color: Seven
Tips For Great Results
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Tips for Great Results
By Nancy
Faizabadi
Doing your own home hair color for the first time can
be intimidating, to say the least. Have I chosen the right
color? What if I make a mistake and wind up with green
hair? What if I end up with overprocessed, dry damaged
hair?
The fact is that you can achieve excellent results and
save a lot of money by coloring your hair at home as long
as you know a few basics about how to select the right
color and apply it correctly.
Here are seven of the most common questions and my advice
on hair coloring at home.
Advice on Permanent Hair Coloring at Home
1. How do I know whether I should color my hair at
home or go to a salon?
Most people can successfully color their hair at home
but there are exceptions. You should get a professional
color job if your hair is in poor condition - coloring
dry damaged hair at home can result in uneven color. Also,
if your hair has different shades and you want one even
tone, a hairdresser can apply different formulas to the
different areas. Finally, it's best to leave it to the
experts if you want to make a drastic change to your hair
color, say dark brown to platinum blonde, or you want
special color effects or highlights.
2. Are drugstore hair colors just as good as salon
hair color products?
In general, salon hair colors contain higher-quality ingredients
than the drugstore brands. Salons also offer a wider variety
of colors and tones. But home coloring kits are getting
better all the time and can deliver good results if used
properly.
3. How do I pick a color that will look natural on
me?
When choosing a hair color, your skin tone and natural
hair color are the two most important factors. Whether
you're going lighter or darker, stay within two or three
shades of your natural hair color. Here is a guideline
for selecting a compatible hair color for your skin tone:
Dark/olive skin: Stay with darker hair colors.
Yellow skin: Dark, rich colors like deep auburn.
Pale skin: Almost any color.
Pink skin: Neutral tones like sandy or beige blonde
or chocolate brown are best. Avoid reds or golden tones.
If you know what clothing colors suit you, you can also
use that to help in choosing hair color:
If you look good in warm shades like red, orange, golden
yellow, cinnamon brown, olive green, and rust, then warm
hair tones like golden blonde, golden brown, strawberry
blonde, and auburn will suit you best.
Cool color favorites like bluish red, fuschia, black,
royal blue, and pine green indicate that cool hair tones
are best for you: platinum, ash blonde, ash brown, burgundy,
and jet black.
If you look good in true red, purple, charcoal grey, periwinkle,
and teal, then neutral tones like sandy or beige blonde,
chocolate brown or mahogany will suit you.
4. How do I get ready to color my hair the first time?
It's a good idea to gather a few materials together before
starting: an old T-shirt, a few old towels and a washcloth
that you don't mind getting stained, some hair clips for
sectioning your hair, a timer, and a hand mirror to see
the back of your head.
5. If I color my hair at home and hate it, what can
I do?
There are some home hair color products you can use to
repair the damage, but it isn't easy. The problem is that
if you used a home hair color kit to obtain a lighter color,
your hair has been bleached and colored in a single process.
So the color needs to be added back in a process called
"filling" before using the final color formula. Whatever
you do, don't simply buy a box of your original color and
try to cover over a bad dye job... it won't work. Fixing
hair color gone wrong is a multi-stage process so a trip
to the salon may be in order.
6. I already have permed hair. Can I color it without
damaging it?
If your hair has been permed or relaxed, color has to be
applied carefully or it can weaken the structure of your
hair. Salons have colors specially formulated for treated
hair. But if you insist on home hair coloring, choose a
shade darker than you want since processed hair may come
out lighter than expected. Then do a strand test to make
sure your hair can handle the chemical stress.
7. I love my new color... now how do I keep it looking
good?
You'll probably want to recolor every four to six weeks.
Make a record of the hair color product and shade you used,
and how long you left it on the ends and the regrowth.
Use shampoos and conditioners formulated for color-treated
hair to prevent fading. Stay out of the sun and chlorinated
pools. Hair that has been previously been bleached is prone
to such effects and should be rinsed as soon as possible.
Don't use heavy conditioners and oil treatments after coloring...
they can lift the color.
Now go out and enjoy your new look and all the money you
saved by doing it yourself!
Nancy Faizabadi is a professional hair stylist and the
founder of http://www.short-hair-style.com/ where you
can find free tips on short hair style and color ideas,
hair color trends, hair products and much more. Whether
your hair is fine, thick, curly, straight, processed,
colored or in need of a new style, short-hair-style.com
has a section for you.
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