Friday, July 27, 2012

Is It Safe to Color Your Own Hair at Home?


Have you been thinking about dying your own hair? Hair coloring can be a scary thing, but it's not always dangerous or bad, as long as you go into the experience with a little knowledge.

A Little Education about Home Hair Coloring
Home hair coloring can be purchased at the discount store or drug store. It is typically ($5.0
more affordable ($5.00 - $20.00) and comes with instructions on how to apply the hair color at home.
The product itself is not very different from the color used by professionals in the salon. Although, it’s typically a stronger formulation than salon hair color because the color has to be strong enough to work on anyone's hair that picks the color out at the store. This means, the formula is the same no matter how thick, thin, dark, course or light your natural hair is.
It’s important to notice that the color of hair on the girl on the box is not the exact color that your hair will turn out. It’s proximate, and will vary based on your natural hair tone and color, other color processes done on your hair in the past, the condition of your hair, and even the temperature at which the color processes on your head.

A Few Tips to Remember Before You Color Your Hair at Home
  • Read ALL of the instructions prior to using the color. Then read them again. Call the toll-free number or visit the website listed on the box if you are confused.
  • Home hair color can be messy. Get some old towels out (because they will get ruined), wear an old shirt that you don't care about, and watch for drips and spills. Hair color will stain just about anything it touches (even the semi-permanent stuff).
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  • DO NOT wash your hair prior to coloring your hair. The natural oils on your head protect your scalp and help protect your hair from damage. Product is okay to color over.

  • Choose a temporary or semi-permanent color whenever possible over permanent. It's like the difference between using a sharpie or a pencil on white wall. Sure, you can get the sharpie off, eventually, but the process is much harder than trying to get pencil off.

  • Purchase two boxes of color if your hair is long or very thick to ensure that you get even coverage. If you don't use the second box, you can always return it or use it next time.

  • Colors described as "warm", "honey", or "gold" are warm colors. Colors described as "ash" or "beige" is cool hair colors. "Natural" or "neutral" are right in the middle of warm and cool. Most people choose neutral and warm colors over cool hair colors.

  
 When it is Okay to Color Your Hair at Home

           When your hair coloring goals meet these criteria, you get the green light for home hair color:
  • Covering Gray: when you do not want to change your hair color, rather just cover the gray.

  • Warming up Your Hair's Tone: for example if you are changing from "mousey brown" to a "honey brown” or from "ash blond" to "golden blond".

  • Going just a Bit darker or lighter: changing your color one to two shades darker or lighter is a fairly safe home hair color occasion.

  • Really Red: Just be sure that you are not trying to go from a medium brown to a light strawberry blond. As long has your hair color level is about the same, going red can be fun and safe to do at home. Again, I'd highly recommend trying semi-permanent color at least the first time, as it can be quite the crap shoot as to which tone of red your hair will actually turn out.

When To Seek Professional Advice
Professional stylists have a vast knowledge of hair color tones, levels, and how to achieve them. We learn every possible scenario that can make a great hair color, and we learn how to fix hair color that just doesn't go right. While hair coloring is a science, it's not exact and even the safest hair coloring can go wrong with no rhyme or reason to it. In these situations, I'd highly recommend consulting a professional before you risk a home hair color disaster:
  • Big Changes: Anytime you want to make big changes to your hair color, it’s advisable to seek professional help. Going from blond to brown can easily create a mossy green tone to your hair color. Changing your locks from dark brown to blond can be a direct path to orange hair.

  • Highlights and Lowlights: Anytime you are bleaching (highlighting) hair you are risking a lot of damage, breakage, splotchy spots, and orange tones. Highlighting and low lighting techniques can be quite tricky and time consuming. Bad results can be very difficult and quite expensive to fix. It's best to leave this type of service to the pros.

  • Recent Surgery or Major Health Changes: when your body has been through stress, surgery, strong medications, or even pregnancy your odds are good that your hair color won't take well (or even at all). Just be sure you tell your hairstylist about your recent health changes so adjustments in your color formulation can be made, if necessary.

  • Unknown Color Already On Your Hair: permanent hair color (even if it fades) stays in your hair shaft until you cut it off. Long hair can be several years old at the ends. If you have hair color already on your hair you may want to seek a professional's help before throwing more color on top. It's not always clear how your new color will react with the old. In this case if you do attempt a home hair color, it is VERY important to do a test strand prior to coloring all of your hair. Better safe than orange hair, I always say!
What to Do When Home Hair Color Goes Bad
sometimes, no matter how careful you are, after the color is rinsed your hair just might not turn out the way you envisioned. Perhaps you didn't intend to have a purple hue to your blond locks, or maybe the bright red glare of your "golden light brown" wasn't exactly what you thought was going to happen. It happens. Do not try to fix it yourself. Do not pass go, do not collect $200. Call your hairstylist. Explain what happened (be brutally honest), and then let her fix the job. Really.


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