Here are the questions asked by community members. Read on to see the answers provided by the ThriftyFun community.
So I dyed my hair from a box to what was suppose to be a medium brown color and it turned out dark brown with a reddish tint. I hated it, so I went and bought that Oops stuff that strips hair dye. It stripped it to an orange medium brown color so I went and got a light medium brown hair color to cover it. My hair came out jet black.
I tried many ways to lighten it at home like the Dawn dish soap and things like apple cider vinegar and it faded some, but not as much as I would've liked. I ended up going to the salon and getting what was suppose to be caramel balayge, but came out with like black hair with white streaks so she redid it and it came out closer to what I was wanting. Since then my highlights have faded some and are starting to go back to the super light whitish color that looks weird on top of my dark hair. I want my dark base to fade without making the balayge go super light too. Any suggestions on how to do so?
You might try henna, which is a natural hair dye from India originally detoxinista.com/
It is a more natural and gradual color change
Other than that you can just bleach it out and then start over
Try one of those semipermanent colors that wash out in a few shampoos. You have done a lot of processing on your hair and don't want to damage it further
There have been many modifications to henna over the years. But henna in its natural state will produce only red hair. As Brianna didn't state she wanted red hair, henna is not an option.
For what it's worth, hair colors (dyes, if you must) penetrate the hair shaft to varying degrees. Henna does not penetrate the hair, it coats it. Therefore, henna is not a dye, it is a coating.
If history an my memory serves me correctly, henna was used by the Egyptians millennia before its appearance in India.
There was a fad in the 60s & 70s where a few women shaved their heads and went bald. The fad didn't last long. If Brianna bleaches her hair, she just might unintentionally re initiate that fad.
If I understand you situation correctly, the only way you will get your 'base' color lighter is to use a color remover on that portion of the hair only. The color remover would have to be in a dilute form, watched very closely for desired color change and then removed immediately. This process is not for an amateur to attempt.
If you can achieve the base color you want, then you can address the lighter, fading ends. I would suggest a temporary or semi permanent (no oxidizers) color.
What can I do to fix my orange/yellow hair?
By Marge from Brandon, FL
I have done this a few times and the first thing I did was wash my hair in powdered Tide... several times to lighten the color. Not really good on hair but it will help lighten the color somewhat.
I dyed my hair today and it turned out really bright red like Ariel the little mermaid. It is now red from being blonde. How do I darken up the red so it is not so bright?
I am naturally a dark blonde/mousey colour which I've never been happy with. I've been dyeing it a natural ginger/auburn colour for about a year now, which I love.
I recently made the mistake of choosing a dark aurburn permanent hair dye for a change and it was far too dark for me, almost brown. Therefore a week later I thought I would put a red semi-permanent on to brighten it up. That was a big mistake! It was so bright it was almost pink!
It's been 2 weeks now and I've washed it a lot more than usual, including the washing up liquid in your shampoo technique, the tips have faded back to a ginger colour which is fine. But my top half of my head is still red!
How do I get it out without wrecking my hair? I don't know if it's too soon to put my normal ginger permanent one back on?
Help.
I'd keep going with washing it with a clarifying shampoo. You could strip it and start from new but I'd be worried about damage.
I would go to a beauty school and have one of the students fix it. He or she will be properly supervised, and the cost will be reasonable.
I think you might consider various home remedies starting with Baking Soda which is something designed to strip hair of undesired colour www.stylecraze.com/
there's a whole crew of people who have given up on traditional/conventional shampoos and hair products and believe instead in going 'no poo' (no shampoo) and amongst these ppl baking soda is much promoted. They all have many cleansing hair ideas as well www.nopoomethod.com/
here's a useful infographic too from instagram i.pinimg.com/
basically if you are going to redye, go for something with an ash-base that will counteract the redness
I just dyed my hair a light caramel brown and it turned out red. My son is getting married next week and it cannot be this color. How can I get it darker?
If your son is getting married next week, I suggest you go to a salon and have a professional fix it. If that were not the case, I would have suggested putting a semipermanent dye in your desired color over what you already have.
How bright of a red is it? If it's way out there, you'll need a professional. If it's faint, I'd suggest a semi permanent brown that is darker than your current red.
I would recommend going to a professional to fix the hair color to your desire for the upcoming wedding.
(Congratulations to your son btw!
Advance from Loreal says:
IF YOUR HAIR IS TOO RED
To tone down the red, you can try coloring your hair with a shade of brown thats the same color level as the red shade you used. Apply the color first to the area thats most red and keep it on for five to 10 minutes at most. Check your color every five minutes. Rinse when you feel you hair is dark enough.
www.lorealparisusa.com/
I mixed garnet and fuchsia hair colors and it came out a bit too fuchsia. I would like to darken it up to achieve a burgundy like color with less fuchsia . Can I put a darker color over my hair to achieve the results I'm looking for?
And if so, what color do you suggest? The left pic is what it turned out like the right pic is what I'm trying to achieve.I went to the salon about 3 weeks ago to go red. It's not really the shade I want. And my sister absolutely hates it. I'm standing in her wedding, so next week I have an appointment to hopefully fix it. It has faded quite a bit already, which is good.
I'm wondering if I should use a color remover before I see my stylist, or just let her do all the work? I'd like a more natural brownish red, if that's even possible. Thanks :)So my sister-in-law asked me to dye her hair. I am not a stylist and have only ever dyed my own hair and not that well. I told her this, but she still wanted me to try. She is biracial so has normally dark brown, very curly hair.
She bought burgundy hair dye. She had a lot of white/gray hair mixed in especially at her roots. The gray/white is now Easter egg purple and she can not have unnatural hair for her job. What can we do about the purple hair? The darker hair dyed nicely. Please help! She goes back to work in 2 days!
I had my dark brown hair highlighted about month ago at a salon. I decided it wasn't for me and went to another salon and had it dyed back my natural color.
But now it's too dark. What can I do?My hair is dyed bright orange. I want to tone it down a bit, keep the orange, but just go for a much darker orange, a more burnt orange. The hair is already bright and light. Would I be able to put a darker orange dye over it without bleaching it?
My hair was dark black/brown on top and I had a brownish blonde on my ends for an ombré style, I decided to dye my hair burgundy at home, but now my ends are very bright red. What can I do to fix my ends so they match the top part of my hair?
Please help.
I recently tried to dye my hair a dark auburn color and it just turned out dark with some red. I want to re dye my hair a lighter auburn. I found a home dye that is a hair lightener for dark hair. How long do I have to wait until I can use it?
By Ashley from CA
Things you'll need:
Original blue Dawn dish washing liquid
Step 1: Shampoo your hair with a small amount of Dawn. You will immediately see some of the hair dye being washed down the drain. Repeat if necessary and add a deep conditioner, as using dish washing liquid is a drying method of lightening hair.
Step 2: Mix a bit of Dawn into your regular shampoo. It will fade your hair more gradually than straight Dawn will, but it will be gentler on your hair.
Step 3: Try a clarifying shampoo mixed with some Dawn dish washing liquid. These shampoos are designed to remove styling product build-up from your hair and restore it to a healthy shine. When you mix Dawn into it, you will wash out some of the extra color and get a lightening effect.
Step 4: Saturate your hair with Dawn evenly when you use it to lighten hair that has been dyed too dark. Distribute the dish washing liquid throughout your hair to ensure that it lightens all of your hair evenly. Otherwise, you could get a patchy look to your color.
Step 5: Use Prell shampoo for a similar effect if you don't have any Dawn on hand or cannot find it at the store. Professional colorists even recommend Prell and Dawn to rinse extra color from your hair and lighten it to a more suitable shade.
Step 6: Add baking soda to the Dawn when lightening your hair. The gritty baking soda acts as a scouring agent and scrubs your hair. Be aware that this is very drying and could potentially damage your hair, so go easy.
Wait a day or two after all the shampoo stripping to allow the cuticle layer of the hair shaft to close back down (or even after coloring in the first place) before coloring again otherwise you could end up right back where you started from with too dark of a color. When the cuticle layer is open the inner hair shaft reacts like a sponge. Also, you might want to choose at least one shade lighter (two would be better) than what you're hoping for because it's going to be 'color on/over color'.
My daughter's hair turned a bright sangria color and she has a recital in 2 days how can I lighten it?
Please help!
Will Oops restore my old shade after I applied too much Glam highlights from L O'real?
Thank you for your help.
My hair is naturally almost black with gray mixed in. I wanted a dark blond to tone down the gray. It turned out dark with a red hue to it.
I used a dark blond color, I'm wondering if I highlight my hair using an ash blond will it tone down the red and lighten my hair.It might help you to know that black hair does not contain only black pigment. If you were to change your hair color from black to near white, bleaching would be required. The bleach would first remove the black pigment, Next the brown pigment, then red brown, then red, then red gold, then gold, then yellow, then pale yellow. After the palest yellow shade was achieved, then a toner such as Clairol's White Beige or Roux's Ultra White Minx would be applied to bring the pale yellow up to the near white/ white color.
As you have just learned, a dark blond color did not give you the desired results. All 'regular' permanent colors, with the exception of black and blue/jet black, have a slight lifting (bleaching) action. This slight lifting action removed some of the near black pigment in your hair, revealing some of the natural dark red brown pigment. I seriously you got any noticeable coverage of the grey hair.
You can probably guess by the above information that highlighting your hair with an ash blond color will not solve your problem. As a matter of fact, it will make it worse. The light ash blond will have, though slight, even more lifting action than the dark blond previously applied. More than likely, you would end up with a strange, and even redder color. Couple that with the fact that ash blond colors have a green base, you more than likely would end up with a strange, dark reddish/ greenish color.
I don't know why you chose a dark blond to tone down your grey, unless perhaps you were thinking the colored grey would appear as highlights. A better choice would have been for you to have applied a color that closest matched you natural hair color.
Assuming that your hair is darkest brown, even a darkest brown 'regular' permanent color will have a very slight lifting action, though you may not see any reddish tones til after several shampoos.
Without seeing your hair, I cannot tell you what would be best in your case. My first suggestion would be to recolor your hair, using a color that closest matches your natural color. BUT, do not use a regular color, because as stated above, they have a slight lifting action. Be sure to use a color that has NO lifting action. Check a Clairol Second Nature color chart to see if you find a color close to your natural color, as this line of color has no lifting action.
1. DO NOT apply an ash blond color to your hair.
2. After you have chosen a no lift color you think best matches your natural color, mix a small amount with developer according to package instructions and apply to a small strand of hair in an inconspicuous area and allow to develop the full required amount of time. This strand test will show what the end results will be when applied to the entire head.
It may be that using the above method will put your hair back to a color that closely resembles your natural color, however, do not expect it to be a perfect match. It could well be though, that the color will be one you really like. Good luck!
I dyed my hair a reddish brown and it turned out more red. How can I lighten it so it's not as red? My natural color is blonde.
By Summer
My hair is auburn naturally so this is what I do for light auburn:
There are 5 Tbsp. in the color bottle, so I use the following ...
3 1/2 Tbsp of Nice N Easy #103
1 1/2 Tbsp of Nice N Easy #110 and its the color that I want. If I want a little lighter I add a bit more of the 103 & a little less of 110 in the activator. This is what the people at Clairol told me to do. Good Luck
Wash your hair back to back several times & use dish soap. You will see the color wash down the drain. If thats still not enough try using a color refresher such as John Frieda in brown. It will help to tone down the red. Good luck.
I went to a new hair dresser and I am so so upset. Usually I have highlights. Today she colored my hair first and then did the highlights and I look like I am wearing a yellow wig with an orange tint! How can I wash this out?
By Lisa
You should immediately return to the hair stylist/salon with your complaint and request an immediate correction for the problem. They should be able to provide a reasonable solution for you. If they do not help you, you can report them to the Better Business Bureau in your area.
7 days ago I colored my hair dark brown, it started washing out and getting a red tint to it. The hair dresser stripped it down too much and it turned orange. She said just let it grow out, so I did not pay her. I then went and got a hair color to try and cover the orange, label - Loreal 7 A. Now it's orange, red, and brassy. Can anyone help?
By phillipj from NC
Something like that happened to me in 1994. That was when I decided to never do anything chemical to my hair again. I have shiny hair with a bit of natural wave (didn't know that before), and like my brown/silver color.
However, the orange... find a product that is basically a rinse, and temporary, and use that until the color sort of normalizes. Avoid any more peroxide based hair color (most) if you can. Keep trimming a bit at a time.
My hair is grey. I have been having the hairdresser do light brown for years. Of recent my current hairdresser was using 6 or 7? My hair gradually was getting darker each time she did my color. I asked to lighten it back up and we ended up with black/greenish.
So the same day she tried to correct or get the green out. It has been several months, with a new attempt every 4 weeks or so to undo or gradually get back to light, not black, and it's not happening. We are both hopeful we can process some options and make a decision what to do next. My hair was thick, short, and very easy to manage. The thickness is gone. She is suggesting bleaching. I'm getting other opinions. I would like anyone's feedback. I'm thinking I might just grow it out and be grey for awhile till it gets some length and we can start over. I would appreciate your help. Thanks for any suggestion. I'm most concerned if the thickness can be restored.
By ETG from HI
In my opinion, I would find a new hairdresser. When they stop doing what you want, and mess up with "greenish" hair they are no longer interested.