Home Hair Dye Help!
Replies
-
I do my own.
I do agree to go to a professional though. Unless you really plan to research what you are doing.
I did A LOT of research before I started doing my own. There is A LOT to learn about going from dark to light. I got it down pat now.
But it was a lot of trial and error.
PS Weather you are going to use a darker or a lighter color NEVER USE BOX DYES. (like you get from a drug store) They are filled with crap that is horrible for you. Go to Sally's and buy everything you need. It isn't anymore expensive at all.
yesss. I'm planning on doing a bit more research and definitely going to sallys if I decide to do it myself!0 -
I'm just excited that you spelled "dyed" correctly :-) Good luck!!
hahaha thanks!0 -
Heeey, can I butt in a little here? My 10 year old daughter wants to go hot pink for the summer. I'm ok with that in theory, my hair has been all over the do-it-yourself rainbow, but this is MY BABY'S hair... I don't want to damage it too much, and I don't really want it to be a ... giant production, if you know what I mean.
As I recall, that kind of dye works best on non-virgin hair, right? And it lightens pretty easily, but come school time it would probably have to be color-corrected back to a natural shade, right? Otherwise it will be some yucky shade of dull pink (and I'm not a cool enough mom for her to wear her hair like that, or bright pink, to school).
Or have they come out with better temporary dyes that we could use without lightening first, that would last a month or so?
Look around at Sally's Beauty they can answer this question best. The only one i know of manic panic, but you have to lighten hair first with their Flashlighter kit.0 -
if you are looking for cost effectiveness, then all i can really recommend is start out with a professional...get them to do it in a salon and asks LOTS of questions about your hair and hte process....LOTS of questions...
then if you feel confident enough, try and find a student hairstylist who will do it for a fraction of the cost, with your learning curve and her education, it should go ok.
But blonde is the one that you can screw up really really bad, and coming back from the cliff of a blonde mistake is expensive. So I totally agree with the previous posters about going to a salon...especially for first time blonde experiments0 -
My sister, who has naturally very light brown hair, decided to dye it black and hated it!! She didn't have enough money to go to a Salon and instead went to Sally's and bought a Color Lifter. Her hair did not turn brassy or break. She's back to a nice light brown and her hair actually came out very nice. I'm considering doing the same thing to go lighter because I too have black hair and have considered going reddish brown. Try Sally's Good luck!0
-
32 year professional hairstylist and master colorist here. One level lighter or darker is okay to do on your own if your hair is virgin. Virgin means NO NONE NADA chemicals on your hair. Not the last month, 2 months ago 6 months ago... Try one year if your hair is 6" or shorter. Other then that, you are looking to be disappointed. We have trained for years to do what we do.. Its no joke. So when you "F" it up, come on in , we will be happy to fix it for you at 500% the normal price.0
-
I currently use a thirty volume developer with L'Oreal Blondes Extreme (or Extreme Blonde?), but I'm only doing my roots and my hair lifts fairly easily. I agree that you should go to a pro if you're doing an all over blonde from a darker color. I've been through major hair disasters in the past, and while I've achieved a nice blonde on my own using bleach and a toning color, it's very tricky and also very easy to overlap color later and wind up with breakage. I won't use bleach anymore.0
-
For highlights at home: Try Revlon Frost & Glow for medium to dark brown hair. Gave me the perfect highlights.
With that you can start lighting your hair slowly. After, I had them in, I decided I wanted to go blonde at home but, no box lighten it more than a light brown to dark blonde.
I decided to just go to the salon and get it lightened. Came out great w. the already highlights I had in. I went back maybe one more time for all over to make it a bit lighter. However, I didn't want to keep spending so much money on touch-ups.
I found out: I could use: L'oreal super blonde to touch up my roots and then any L'oreal dye in medium ash blonde (my fav color) never turns brassy and haven't been back to a colorist since. I can now achieve it at home & have been blonde for a year and a 1/2.0 -
I used to sell art supplies in Seattle and one of my co-workers had super beautiful long blond hair. I almost fell over when she said her natural color was a light brown. She used Preference by L'Oreal , which also owns Lancome. Anyway, once she dyed it , she only touched up her roots. You could try it? I would try one of those kits with the highlights too.
But, in general, if I were to go really blond . I would trust it to a pro.
:flowerforyou:0 -
yesss. I'm planning on doing a bit more research and definitely going to sallys if I decide to do it myself!
i love the Ion products at sally's! every Ion product i've tried, all for different things (shampoo, bleach, dye, etc) does exactly what is is supposed to and does it really well. it's a bit pricey though.0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.4K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 427 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions