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Nephythys 02-09-2009 02:10 PM

hair-
 
Help-

I have been dying it red (various shades) for months-I hate it now- I mean- I love the colors and its been fun but I am driving myself nuts maintaining it-

I'm over it.

I saw a product called hair color remover-that gets rid of the color and preps it for a new color.

Would that work on me? If I then went back to strawberry blonde?

I am seriously ready to go SUPER short pixie and just bleach it.

HELP- my sanity is leaking out my hair.

katiesue 02-09-2009 02:15 PM

I would find a really good colorist and go there. You can then maintin it yourself but they're good at telling you how damaged your hair is now, what a new process will do to it, how the color might take etc. It will cost more than doing it yourself but may save you from frying your hair in the long run.

Nephythys 02-09-2009 02:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by katiesue (Post 267799)
I would find a really good colorist and go there. You can then maintin it yourself but they're good at telling you how damaged your hair is now, what a new process will do to it, how the color might take etc. It will cost more than doing it yourself but may save you from frying your hair in the long run.

been there done that-they did a horror brown job on me


I am using products that make my hair feel and behave pretty fabulous-but I have to change this-

They also refuse to get me back to any kind of blonde-

Kevy Baby 02-09-2009 02:36 PM

I can tell you that Susan (who used to dye her hair red as well) decided to go back to natural (blond). After conferring with several people, she elected to just go with the "let it grow out" method. It didn't take long to get back to her own color (she didn't cut it all off: she just let the color fade away).

However, I would wait for the LoT resident expert, Wendybeth.

Nephythys 02-09-2009 02:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kevy Baby (Post 267803)
I can tell you that Susan (who used to dye her hair red as well) decided to go back to natural (blond). After conferring with several people, she elected to just go with the "let it grow out" method. It didn't take long to get back to her own color (she didn't cut it all off: she just let the color fade away).

However, I would wait for the LoT resident expert, Wendybeth.

I might do that too-

I seriously am considering cutting it wayyy short-and then letting it go. The longer it is the more I am tempted to keep coloring it.

wendybeth 02-09-2009 02:48 PM

Did I hear 'hair'?:D


Depending on the amount of dye in your hair, Neph, the decolorizer might work, but that's a big might. Red is notorious for fading, yet a big ol' PITA when you want it gone. A rule of thumb in color is 'dye does not remove dye', i.e. any lighter-toned haircolor will not remove the color underneath if it is synthetic. You can use color to tone down or deepen, but not remove. (Ash is the tone to cancel red). Most stylists will try decolor, then condition, dry and apply a creme bleach to lift out the remaining color. You almost always have to tone it with a blonde series to give it a natural look after all this, and sometimes the porosity of the hair makes it difficult for the toner to take and remain.

In short- it's a big process to go through, but it can be done. I recommend home stuff all the time to people who don't want to go to a salon, but this is one instance where you really need the expertise of a good colorist. I suspect this is why Susan chose to bite the bullet and grow it out- it's a process that sometimes takes several appointments, and can be very expensive.

I hope this helps- feel free to ask any questions you may have, and gl!

Nephythys 02-09-2009 02:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by wendybeth (Post 267805)
Did I hear 'hair'?:D


Depending on the amount of dye in your hair, Neph, the decolorizer might work, but that's a big might. Red is notorious for fading, yet a big ol' PITA when you want it gone. A rule of thumb in color is 'dye does not remove dye', i.e. any lighter-toned haircolor will not remove the color underneath if it is synthetic. You can use color to tone down or deepen, but not remove. (Ash is the tone to cancel red). Most stylists will try decolor, then condition, dry and apply a creme bleach to lift out the remaining color. You almost always have to tone it with a blonde series to give it a natural look after all this, and sometimes the porosity of the hair makes it difficult for the toner to take and remain.

In short- it's a big process to go through, but it can be done. I recommend home stuff all the time to people who don't want to go to a salon, but this is one instance where you really need the expertise of a good colorist. I suspect this is why Susan chose to bite the bullet and grow it out- it's a process that sometimes takes several appointments, and can be very expensive.

I hope this helps- feel free to ask any questions you may have, and gl!



So chopping it off-and letting it grow out-and then chopping off the red ends is the easiest and best way to go.

Check :)

Moonliner 02-09-2009 03:30 PM







For me at least, those are the three that come to mind when you mention starting over. Not a bad group.

Capt Jack 02-09-2009 03:37 PM

as fast as most hair grows, the above would be short lived in any case Im sure.

Ive always thought it looked kinda hot on women anyway....but then, Im a bit of a freak

Nephythys 02-09-2009 04:03 PM

heh-not that short LOL


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