QuoteReplyTopic: Highlighting at Home (Ques.2) Posted: June 21 2000 at 11:06pm
Hi Portiatalk
If you want highlights in the golden color you really have to pre-lighten the hair. However a fun way to see if you might like highlights is to buy a spray on golden color and try isolating hairs on your head and spray with the gold color. You can get an idea if you would like the look or not.
Forest
Happyblonde
Members Profile
Send Private Message
Find Members Posts
Add to Buddy List
Newbie
Joined: December 05 2000
Status: Offline
Points: 34
You're welcome. I also remembered some more ingredients to look out for as they can be too harsh: Sodium C14-16 olefin sulfonate is a harsh detergent, as also TEA Lauyrl Sulfate. Alkyl Sodium Sulfate and Triethanalomine are also harsh ingredients.
I wanted to restate something I wrote before, that places like Sally Beauty and other beauty supply stores that cater to the general public do have quality products, but might not actually be quite as high quality as a true salon product. Depends on the product, and you might even find that some beauty supply products are better than salon brands. Still, both salon products and beauty supply stores are much better than drugstore brands.
Be sure that if you do use permanent color that you start using salon quality products. If you buy them from any other place than a salon you might be getting counterfeit. Another choice is to go to a beauty supply store that caters to non-stylists, like "Sally Beauty Supply". The products there can be as high quality of products as salon products. Just don't go the drug store route.
Especially watch out for harsh detergents like "Sodium Lauryl Sulfate", "Ammonium Lauryl Sulfate", and "Ammonium Laureth Sulfate". "Sodium Laureth Sulfate" is a gentle detergent. This goes for any hair, colored or not colored. Permed or not permed, too. Also for any type of hair you should not use the silicone "Dimethicone" as it's not water soluble and you can get build up that can dry out your hair. You might not get too much build up if it's past the fifth ingredient on the label. However, I would avoid dimethicone as much as possible.
Happyblonde
Happyblonde
Members Profile
Send Private Message
Find Members Posts
Add to Buddy List
Newbie
Joined: December 05 2000
Status: Offline
Points: 34
Besides hair mascaras, maybe there are some temporary colors that are blond that will show up that way for your haircolor. Other than these products, bleach or one step blonding kits (like Clairol's "Ultimate blonde")are the only two products that I know of that will create blonde highlights. If you're hair isn't that dark of brown, you might be able to try a regular colorant that doesn't state that it's a maximum blonding product. For example, you might be able to use a blonde color from the Clairol "Ultress" line that isn't the "Ultimate Blonde" products, but is a blonde color. A stylist should be able to tell if you're hair is able to be blonded that way. Then if you can, you can just highlight the strands that you want highighted with a highlighting brush. There are really skinny brushes like a pencil with just a few bristles and some that are wider and more traditional looking. Happyblonde
So does anyone know of any way to try highlights on medium to dark brown hair that is not permanent? Or do all highlight (golden) processes involve bleach?
You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot create polls in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum