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Nothing can lift your looks and your spirit like a new color for your hair! A sassy new hair color changes the way you look at yourself. There are many, many ways to add hair color for hair: Good hair colors can add shine, drama and fun to your hair style. It can make some hair types easier to style. Although the majority of women color hair to cover gray hair, not all women who color their hair are gray. Many women try a hair color change for the fun of having a new look, and the pizzazz it can add to your hair style. If you decide to add color for hair, it would be wise to first educate yourself. Taking the time to learn about color can save you tears and disastrous results. (Read some of the hair color horror stories) Remember, if your hair is in damaged condition before hair coloring, it may very well become worse afterward. Make sure you have your hair condition in the best possible shape before adding color for hair. For the best results, stay within two shades of your natural hair color. Semi-permanent color for hairWant a gentle boost of color with no "roots"? Semi-permanent color for hair is an easy way to create a change and is gentle on your hair. Also called glazing, color stains or washes, these products can boost hair shine and texture by coating the hair with a non-peroxide hair color. The color gradually washes out naturally in about 4-6 weeks. Semi-permanent color for hair can only darken the hair and it will only cover gray hair temporarily. These hair color rinses can help tame hair frizzies and actually may make the hair appear healthier. I strongly recommend that you use semi-permanent color for hair, as long as it can produce the results you want, before going on to permanent hair color. It is by far the most gentle on your hair, and a low risk way to "try out" a new hair color. An added benefit: there's no monthly maintenance with touch ups. Permanent color for hairPermanent hair for color breaks down the hair cuticle and deposits pigment into the hair shaft. Unlike semi-permanent color for hair, permanent hair color can be used to lighten your hair. It accomplishes this by bleaching hair and depositing color in a one-step process. Permanent color for hair is more effective for covering gray hair. Although the color will fade over time, it can't be washed out or removed to return to your natural shade. Permanent hair color can be damaging to hair, and long-term use can result in permanent, irreversible harm to your hair. Long-term damage that results from the use of permanent color for hair can be minimized by being extra careful with your daily hair care regimen. Hair highlights, streaking, weaving and foilingHair highlights can be added to the hair by any of the above methods. Any hair can be highlighted and the hair is usually given more depth and texture by this process. You can add lighter, brighter strands of hair overall or just create a few highlights in specific areas. This is a great process for the timid or first time blondes. I should also mention "hair low lights" here. The same basic processes are used in both color treatments. However, instead of lightening the hair, creating low lights involves adding darker shades of blonde highlights or warmer brown hair color highlights. Hair highlights have come a long way in recent years and a talented hair colorist can weave two or three different natural looking highlights and lowlights into your hair, creating beautiful effects. Hair bleachingHair bleaching had a big resurgence in popularity after Marilyn Monroe became a cultural icon. Her iconic image has been copied by celebrities, musicians and women from all walks of life. Bleaching is almost always a two-step process. First, the hair is bleached to remove the natural pigment and then a hair toner is applied to achieve the desired result. This double process is quite rough on the hair and very damaging. It is also a time-consuming process. Expect to spend at least an hour in the hair salon every 2-3 weeks for hair color touch-ups. On brown hair colors, in addition to being hard on the hair, it is particularly difficult to keep up this look. If your skin tone is olive or dark, it will look very unnatural. After the process, the hair is so fragile that extreme care needs to be taken in styling. Use protective creams and be very careful when blow drying, curling with a curling iron or using a straightener. Keeping the length short is probably the best way to go, as you can cut off damaged or split ends often. When the hair is shorter, the damage is also less noticeable. At home or in the hair salon?You will get consistently better results leaving color for hair to a professional colorist. A good hair stylist will be able to pick out the hair colors that work best with your skin tone, so the result will be natural looking. A professional is also experienced in the correct application and timing for color, bleach and highlights. Application and timing can be tricky and is influenced by the natural hair shade, type of hair color and the condition of your hair. Your hair's porosity will determine how long color for hair should be left on. Even touching up roots can be tricky. Almost all hair will benefit by using a clarifying shampoo before you add color for hair. A professional can navigate all these issues at once to produce natural and beautiful results. I realize some of you just don't have the time or money to spend at a hair salon and will decide to hair color at home. If you do decide to color your at home by using a store bought color for hair product, remember that the actual hair shade you will achieve will vary from the picture on the box. I would recommend following the directions exactly, and taking the time to do a strand test to determine if you will get the result you expect before any damage is done. The instructions that come with the color will have a section describing how to do a strand test.
The perfect hair color for youWhatever type of color for hair you opt for, choosing the proper range of shades—warm or cool—is the key to a great look. Determining whether you are warm or cool in terms of coloring must be the first consideration in choosing a hair color. The right hair color shade will brighten up your hair style . . . and your life. A shade in the wrong range will be totally and completely wrong. What is the most basic principle of hair color theory applied to hair? It's choosing between warm and cool shades—and with the dizzying variety of color for hair available, choosing can sometimes be confusing. The best way to make pleasing hair color choices is to determine whether your natural coloring—hair, eye, and skin tones—is in the warm or cool range of colors. Answer these questions, or better yet, have your best friend give you her opinion, since her opinion is likely to be more accurate: My eyes are:
My skin is:
My hair color is:
What were your answersDid you check mostly cools? If so, your natural tones are in the cool spectrum. Mostly warms? Then you're naturally "warm." CoolNaturally cool people should avoid gold, yellow, red and bronze tones, which have a tendency to make you look sallow and drawn. The best hair color shades, depending on your skin tone, are shiny raven-wing blacks, cool ash brown hair colors, and cool blondes in shades ranging from mink to platinum and icy white. You're fortunate to be able to wear many exciting "unnatural" colors . . .for lipstick try reds, burgundies, and orchids, for a more daring look. WarmNaturally warm people should avoid blue, violet, white and jet-black hair, which will seem to "wash out" your natural hair color. Depending on your skin tone and your preference, you'll find that deep chocolate, rich golden brown hair colors, auburn, warm gold, red highlights, and golden blond shades enhance your "sunny" look. Hair weaving and hair highlighting are great ways to add warm tones to your hair color—and natural-looking corals, oranges and reds look dazzling on you! Covering gray hairMake sure you don't look incongruent. What do I mean? We age as a unit. If your hair color (or any other feature, for that matter) is out of sync with the overall aging process, it may look unnatural. When our eyes see a 60-year-old woman with jet black hair, our sensory acuity will begin screaming "what's wrong with this picture." Think of the "comb-over guy." You know the guy who is nearly bald, but lets a few strands grow to three feet long and then plasters them over the bald spot. Believe it or not, he goes to the mirror each morning and says, "This works . . . look how young and virile I look." Don't be the female version of the comb-over guy! The bottom line on color for hairGo slowly with full head hair color changes, and certainly get lots of advice and consultation with a professional hair colorist before you start. Never, ever, make this decision by yourself. It will almost always be a mistake. This is the time to call on your best friend for advice and counsel. Fixing a hair color mistakeNo single area of the hair styling business brought me more heartache than to see the horrible results that occurred from attempts to correct hair coloring mistakes. Never, ever, try to fix or adjust hair color by yourself—this is the time for a professional colorist. Even as a hair stylist with over 25 years of experience, I always passed these clients on to a professional hair colorist. I knew that all I would likely do was make matters worse. The earlier you get the professional hair colorist involved in the correction process, the better chance they will have of getting you back to normal, with little cost or hassle. The more you attempt to correct it on your own, the less likely the hair colorist can help. In this situation, even if the hair colorist can do it, you can bet it will be expensive. It will also cause irreversible damage to your hair. To find a professional colorist, just call any hair salon and ask for a referral. Believe me, you are not alone. The best hair salons get several of these type calls a month. When its time for the appointment with the professional hair colorist, bring everything you can to the appointment, most importantly the product containers and documentation of the color for hair product you used. It will help the professional hair colorist greatly if they know what chemical brew went into your hair color attempts. Fess up and be honest, even if you are embarrassed. Tell the hair colorist exactly what steps you took (and every product you used in your hair), even if they were really, really dumb.
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