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hey!
I dyed my hair last year and It went to a bright aurburn colour i liked it for a bit but then i got bored - ever since ive been trying to dye it back to dark/goldeny brown the colour of my natrul hair but every time I dye it the colour washes out and now u I have like dark roots and th erest an uneven colouring of dark aubrun/ginger & brown , its driving me crazy!
I just bought this dye called *Garnier nutrisse* which looks pretty hot & is in the sahde of *cappuccino* which looks the a lot like my natrul hair clolour it has highlight bits in the mix of golden brown and dark brown which I thought would be good to cover up my gross random bits of colour but it says that if the clour is a lot diffrent from m ycolour now that I should buy a pre-;ightner but I dont know if I should waste my money on it or go for this clour & I am worried it wont cover up my hair and last longer then one day like the others!
Please help xox
What should I do?

2006-08-21 04:59:45 · 9 answers · asked by kj l 1 in Beauty & Style Hair

9 answers

Well since red is a pigment of brown I don't see why you're having problems with keeping up your brown look. If I were you I would go to the salon...the last thing you want is a hair disaster.

2006-08-21 05:06:23 · answer #1 · answered by Munchy Mooneo 3 · 0 0

If you are going darker, no. If you are going lighter you will need a bleach to remove artificial pigment. For longer lasting color. Fill the hair first. Pick a color a little lighter than the one you will use later. Mix the color with water, not peroxide. Run it through the ends mostly where haircolor will fade fastest. Let is sit about 10 minutes and take as much off as you can with an old towel, Mix the next color you will use and apply normally. To cut down some of the red, use and ash brown.

2006-08-21 05:11:07 · answer #2 · answered by Fleur de Lis 7 · 0 0

In case you are going darker, no. If you're going lighter you are going to want a bleach to eliminate artificial pigment. For longer lasting color. Fill the hair first. Opt for a color slightly lighter than the one you are going to use later. Combine the color with water, now not peroxide. Run it via the ends almost always the place haircolor will fade quickest. Let is take a seat about 10 minutes and take as a lot off as that you would be able to with an historic towel, combine the following color you will use and observe mostly. To decrease one of the crucial pink, use and ash brown.

2016-08-09 12:07:04 · answer #3 · answered by ? 2 · 0 0

If you're going darker, no. If you're going lighter you're going to desire a bleach to take away synthetic pigment. For longer lasting colour. Fill the hair first. Pick a colour a bit of lighter than the only you're going to use later. Mix the colour with water, no longer peroxide. Run it via the ends quite often wherein haircolor will fade quickest. Let is take a seat approximately 10 mins and take as so much off as you'll with an historical towel, Mix the following colour you're going to use and practice mostly. To shrink one of the most pink, use and ash brown.

2016-08-21 00:36:36 · answer #4 · answered by ? 2 · 0 0

You need to go to a salon- no color out of a box is going to fix this it will just get worse. You need to get all the color stripped off the hair and start fresh. Only a stylist can so this for you!

2006-08-21 05:07:50 · answer #5 · answered by mystratz 2 · 0 0

you can get colour corrector in a bottle the same as a hair colour. it takes away all the previous colour s you have dyed your hair.then put the new colour on top.

2006-08-21 05:10:53 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

use Sun-In and next time, write a shorter book because no one likes to read alot of useless information.

2006-08-21 05:05:50 · answer #7 · answered by Erin the ROCKSTAR! 3 · 0 0

The oracle says: Too soon to tell.

2006-08-21 05:04:51 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

yes

2006-08-21 05:06:37 · answer #9 · answered by amberharris20022000 7 · 0 0

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