social

Darkening Hair Color with Coffee?

I recently spent a lot of $ I did not have to have my hair low lighted and high-lighted. The original goal was to have my bleached red/orange/gold yellow hair darker. However, I got a hair color a tiny bit darker (very little) than what I had been dyeing it myself. No contrast in color at all. Looks the same to me.

Advertisement

No major highlight either.

Here's the question, I read that you can use cold coffee as a way to make your hair darker. Has anyone else heard this? Also, after I did this could I use the powder hair bleach high light kit to put 4 or 5 strips of blond in my front.

Thank you!

Lisa

Add your voice! Click below to answer. ThriftyFun is powered by your wisdom!

 
By laramay (Guest Post)
November 15, 20070 found this helpful
Best Answer

I heard about the coffee dye too. Dye is pretty expensive and doesn't last very long lately, so I use the coffee rinse whenever I wash my hair to make the dye last longer. It doesn't seem to hurt my hair, just keeps it the same color longer. But you have to be a brunette to use the coffee, won't work on blondes or redheads. Try it and see.

 
By Noelle (Guest Post)
September 28, 20080 found this helpful
Best Answer

I just tried the coffee method. I used 3 tbs coffee grinds (a Starbucks decaf bold kind) and made 3 cups of coffee. I think this is too much. Then I mixed 4 tbs of plain yogurt with 1 egg and added a little vanilla extract for smell. Then I also added about 1 tsp olive oil and stirred. Then I chilled the coffee once it was done brewing and mixed it all together. It was too runny and created a huge mess in the bathroom, so if I do it again I will definitely make it more conditioner-like.

Advertisement

Then I did the best I could at getting it saturated evenly through my hair and threw an old towel around my head for about 15 min. Rinsed with warm water, re-conditioned with normal conditioner and dried. It is very slightly darker, if at all. My highlights are definitely still on the blonde side. My natural color seems the most effected, which seems contradictory, but who knows.

I'd recommend doing it because my hair feels really nice now (probably the mixture besides the coffee, but still) and my husband thinks it looks a bit darker, so maybe it is!

 
March 23, 20130 found this helpful
Best Answer

Today, I tried darkening my hair with coffee. The bottom section of my hair is very dark but the upper front is somewhat blonde. I have not dyed my hair in months and my roots are completley grown out so I wanted to try a more organic, and cheaper way to do my hair. I already knew that this was not meant for blondes, but on the other hand I tried it and it came out a little more browner. I think if I keep doing this it might work. This is what I did...

Advertisement

First, I made about 2 cups of coffee poured it in a bowl and let in cool down. Then, I went upstairs to my bathroom and covered my hair in the coffee and rubbed in with my fingers. I put my hair up and went down stairs to make the conditioner I was going to use for when I rinsed my hair.

For the conditioner I used white conditioner and coffee blend. Mixed it up really good and showered. When my hair started drying I noticed my roots being a different color. It was not a dramatic difference but I do plan on doing this more and more because as I read I have seen that the more you do it the longer it stays in and the more of a difference you will see.

 

Bronze Feedback Medal for All Time! 188 Feedbacks
November 15, 20070 found this helpful

I don't know about the coffee, I would think that a kit to darken it would be better (and faster) then do the bleaching.

If you have a beauty store, Sally's, nearby I would go to them. You can get salon quality ingredients for a good price, buy the card if you think you'll be back, it's on $5 and WAY worth the price very quickly.

Advertisement

Also, I just heard of this great thing called ColorFix by One n' Only, it's a dye (permanent) remover product, you can then dye to what you want. Maybe try that?

 

Gold Post Medal for All Time! 519 Posts
November 15, 20070 found this helpful

I haven't tried the coffee myself, although I have read about it & using sage tea - and I do my own highlights by putting regular drugstore hydrogen peroxide on very dirty hair - and then using color shampoo - I recommend that you experiment with those techniques - and don't forget dark RINSES for a temporary fix. (Roux is the most common brand at beauty supply stores.) But beware - they are not waterproof, if you sweat on your head, as I do!

Advertisement


I have worked out an inexpensive regimen that works very well for me.

 
By pikka (Guest Post)
November 16, 20070 found this helpful

I am 63 and have stopped doing anything to my hair for 13 years. It is shiny and I need no conditioner.

However, when I did do something and was poor at the same time I would pick a color of lighter shade for highlights. In a small dish mix EQUAL parts using stainless or plastic spoons about 1-2 tablespoons will do. Put caps back on bottles, tighten and put in box and put away until next time. It keeps. Use an old toothbrush or small cheap paintbrush to put mixture on a comb. Come carefully from roots where you want highlights, covering dark area. Leave on 3-4 minutes, then cover area already light on same strands. Leave about a minute. It's just to make it the same tone. After no more than total time of 5-10 minutes, wash your hair. After a few days, for darker color, use a box of darker shade you like, and tone a few darker strands. Then your natural color will be the mid tone.

Advertisement

You can get 3-4 applications out of a box, and if you do it gradually, it looks natural.

But consider giving your hair a break eventually and only do highlights, because natural hair has more than one shade in it.

As for dye with natural things, I wouldn't do it until hair is back to its natural self. Coffee or a solution from dark walnut hulls shouldn't do anything to normal hair, but if you've done a lot to it, who knows what it will do, both being kind of acid. Certainly could relax a perm. But if you've only had your hair done once, maybe no big deal if you wait at least a couple of shampoos between what you just had done and your experiment. You can also buy toner from hair places out of which you could make a rinse by itself and it might equalize the colors to some degree if you applied it over all color variations.

 
By Trina (Guest Post)
February 18, 20091 found this helpful

I have tried almost everything when it comes to these treatments. (keep in mind that the amounts I use is for shoulder length hair). The coffee method worked well on my dark hair, helped with shine and color intensity.
I used:
- 2 cups of leave in conditioner
- 2 tbs of ground coffee
- 1 cup of cold brewed coffee
Mix the leave in conditioner with the ground coffee and the cold brewed coffee in a bowl. Then put it in your hair like you would any 'regular' hair dye. Leave it in for 1 hour or as long as you see fit.

When I had red hair
I used:
- 2 cups of leave in conditioner
- 1 tbs of paprika
- 1 cup of cold strong tea, 4 teabags used (use any tea that will give a red color)
Mix the 3 things together and put it in your hair. Leave in for 1 hour or as long as desired. This worked well also for adding extra shine and color to my (dyed) red hair.

When I was blond
I used:
- 2 cups of leave in conditioner (again)
- 1 cup of lemon or lime juice (bottled or fresh)
- 1 cup of cold chamomile tea
Mix (again) and put into hair.
Leave in for 1 hour or as long as desired.

The coffee method and the red hair method can also be used for blonde hair to add some golden or reddish highlights. If the red hair and the blonde hair method works on dark hair I do not know.

Sorry for posting a novel length comment. Hope it helps.

 
December 19, 20110 found this helpful

Before I was very grey, I used strong tea rinse on my brown hair. It darkened the grey and gave a wonderful shine and smelled good, too. I would boil ordinary tea until the water was very dark, strain out the tea leaves, and use this as a rinse when I washed my hair, leaving it on for a few minutes and then rinsing until the water was clear. It added some color and I am guessing the oil in the tea added the shine.

 
Anonymous
March 27, 20210 found this helpful

My hair is 90% white, so it is not the same as yours. I did a coffee rinse and it turned my hair an ugly yellow. I cut it off

 

Add your voice! Click below to answer. ThriftyFun is powered by your wisdom!

 
In This Page
Next >︎
Categories
Health & Beauty Beauty Hair Tips ColoringNovember 15, 2007
Pages
More
💘
Valentine's Ideas!
🎂
Birthday Ideas!
🍀
St. Patrick's Ideas!
Facebook
Pinterest
YouTube
Instagram
Categories
Better LivingBudget & FinanceBusiness and LegalComputersConsumer AdviceCoronavirusCraftsEducationEntertainmentFood and RecipesHealth & BeautyHolidays and PartiesHome and GardenMake Your OwnOrganizingParentingPetsPhotosTravel and RecreationWeddings
Published by ThriftyFun.
Desktop Page | View Mobile
Disclaimer | Privacy Policy | Contact Us
Generated 2024-02-03 10:24:27 in 2 secs. ⛅️️
© 1997-2024 by Cumuli, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
https://www.thriftyfun.com/Darkening-Hair-Color-with-Coffee.html