QuoteReplyTopic: My plan of action (please help) Posted: January 31 2006 at 6:28am
Hi,
I've left my hair alone for a week or so now. I've cut it really
short (just touching shoulders, with lots of layers in) and it looks
better because the really dark, almost black, tips are gone. Also
my hair is in really good condition now.
However, my 2-tone hair colour still isn't sorted.
What I propose to do is strip the colour again - with that seemingly
magical Colorfix - and get my hair as dye-less and light as I
can. Then I'm going to dye over again, with perhaps a slightly
darker ash brown to balance the roots and ends, leaving the dye on the
roots longest. After this my hair will probably be too dark
(hopefully not with lots of test strands), and have a lot of red in it.
That's where I'm kinda stuck. Is there any toner I could use to
get rid of the brassiness in the hair? Or any other
products? I don't mind having red in the hair - I just hate it
when it's more on the orangey side that comes after stripping or
bleaching hair. When my hair goes up to the light it is dark
orange - it's awful.
Please please please can you help me?
(I'll post some pictures of my hair at the moment soon)
I'd say wait and see how it comes out. Many ash colors have green
bases, especially browns. This should significantly reduce any
red or brassiness. To make sure, you could call the company that
makes the dye you choose and ask them if the ash is violet or
green. Violet won't reduce redness, so you would use a violet
based dye if your colorfixed hair comes out yellow with no orange, and
green only if your colorfixed hair comes out orange. If you use
the right base in your dye and you colorfix your hair so that it is all
one starting color, you shouldn't need a toner.
Making metal barettes/concord clips hair safe, long hair style how to: http://alonghair.wordpress.com
Not really. I'm not a pro and I always got my stuff at Sally
where you buy what the pros buy, and it has the base written on the dye
so its real easy to get what you need. I've heard that in England
you aren't allowed to buy at the beauty supply shops? I'd call
the company of the dye you can get and ask them which have green (and
definitely test strand to make sure any part of it doesn't come out too
green if its not starting out as orange).
Making metal barettes/concord clips hair safe, long hair style how to: http://alonghair.wordpress.com
We're allowed to buy from beauty supply shops - if you can find
them/afford them without getting the bulk deals like salons do.
It's true that the salons hog all the professional supplies - it
sucks. But luckily there's a lot on Ebay sold by the salons
themselves when they have too much stock, and that's really crazy
cheap.
We have Sally's but the one closest to me is in Warrington - a good few
hours away, and there's one in scotland too...but I don't drive so I
can't get to either.
Claude
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I'd say if your mixing haircolor to add a pinch of ash into your mixture. The more your change your haircolor and by that I mean going from a natural level 5 to a level 7 or level 8 you would begin to loose control of your desired color. In other words you need to offset that color to help control or prevent brassiness. You could use a little Ash at the desired color level in part of your mixture. That Ash to offset that should never be more than 25% of the mixture by that I mean let's say you are using the following....
40mls of 30 Volume Developer - Depending on the Developer it should give you 2-3 levels of lift...most likely 2 levels of lift.
If the color mixture is a 1:1 ratio of Developer to color you would use the 40mls of 30 Vol then for the color you could use....
30mls of 7N - Desired Color or whatever your target color is plus 10mls of 7A or 7NA (Natural Ash) to help control the brassiness because you are raising the haircolor up several levels. When you get into the blonde colors you would be using violet based colors to control the brassiness instead of Ash. If your hair is porous you might want to use 35mls of 7N or the desired color and just a pinch 5mls of 7A or 7NA to control that brassiness. If you hair is porous it will have a tendency to pull the ash color and you could end up with greenish hues.
Hope that helps...post of PM me with questions you might have. I hope I didn't confuse you any.
I'm not going blonde - I'm naturally a level 8/9, and I'm currently a
dyed level 2/3, but I want to be a level 4/5 light ash brown.
Every time I try and dye over Colorfixed hair, whether it be the
lightest possible ash brown dye - my hair still goes dark brown with
lots of brassiness in.
My dyed hair completely sucks up the dye - to almost black - then it
fades to dark brown; and my natural blonde roots won't take it well at
all. It's so annoying, because I have such light roots, my hair
won't go all one colour.
Part of me thinks I should just go extreme and dye it bloody black
again!!! Either that or let it grow out, dying the roots with the
same light brown gradually until the light brown looks sorta
natural. Argh!
My dream colour is actually not brown at all, it's actually a rich dark
red colour with lighter red highlights...but I can't have that because
my funky mum has bright red hair and I'd look too much like her!!!
Ok, this is me now, with my new shorter hair (still not used to it
yet!), and just look at my god-awful roots! Eugh! I didn't
know they were that bad in the light. You can also see how much
orange there is in my hair...I seriously need to sort it out.
Claude
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Aubergine what color line are you using on your hair? Some of that Sally's stuff is very high in ammonium and that could be drying out your hair and blowing open the cuticle layer on your hair strands. Wella is very high in ammonium too however I do personally like their Wella on the scalp lightener cream. Might want to try some Redken or Goldwell if you can get your hands on it. Actually Chi color doesn't even use ammonium. I've don't have much experience with it but it is growing in popularity among hairstylists and I myself am set to take a class on the Chi color line. Colorfix is probably not a very good color remover and the reason your hair keeps going darker is because some of that artificial color is still in the hair strand after using colorfix. I'm not famaliar with that color remover so I can't help you there. It could take 2 tries to get all that color out but be careful any chemical service dries out the hairstrands. This is why you need to use moisturizing shampoos for color treated hair. Possibly deep condition your hair often to improve it's condition after using Colorfix.
When you begin applying your haircolor where do you begin putting it on? You should begin at the scalp and apply it thru to the mid-shaft on all your hair then pull it thru to the ends. THe hair on the ends is more porous and absorbs the color more quickly. It looks as if the hair on the ends is darker than the hair further up...maybe it's just the picture too I dunno. Is the roots your natural haircolor? You need to do different processes on your previously colored hair than you do your virgin regrowth aka your roots to attain the same color. The Ash or Natural Ash color is what we call a drabber to help control the brassiness of darker levels of haircolor. You don't add much just a pinch to your formula to give you what we like to call control so the color doesn't end up brassy.
Hope I'm helping you and not confusing you...sorry. If you are more confused look up on the internet "Laws of Color".
Maybe re-reading this will help you understand better.
I live in England and don't have a Sally's anywhere near me, so I've
never actually been! I have used colour remover on my hair twice
and it was with Goldwell, not Colorfix. I can't get hold of
Colorfix here, so one of the kind members of the forum is sending me a
box.
I usually use L'Oreal Preference hair colour, but most recently I've
used Clairol Nice n Easy Light ash brown. This is how it turned
out on hair that had been stripped.
I always apply dye to my roots first, and leave it on the longest, then
bring the dye down the the rest of the hair, ends last. My hair
is most porous at the tips and at the front sides, and it is darker
there. Even if I only apply dye to my roots the rest of the hair
still grabs it when it's being washed out - I honestly can't win!
On the picture the roots is not my natural colour, my natural colour is
less orangey and more light. This is just the faded remnants of
the light ash brown dye on the roots, after stripped hair. I deep
condition my hair with salon products regularly and always use a gentle
shampoo and conditioner for coloured hair. I'm am very kind to my
hair considering, but my hair obviously isn't very kind to me!
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