It depends on the tone color of your skin (mostly just of your face)
But maybe a light brown or darker shades of redish brown
A goldish color would even look good
2006-12-03 16:23:31
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answer #2
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answered by incontrol123456 1
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instead of cooler highlights get draker highlights like drack red it will look sooooo pretty
2006-12-03 16:14:58
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answer #3
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answered by Jazzy305 4
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Probably blonde, but not too light....depends how red your hair is.
2006-12-03 16:16:42
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answer #4
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answered by DogLover 3
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Highlights can be added to the hair by any of these methods. Any hair can be highlighted and is usually given more depth and texture by this process. You can add lighter, brighter strands of hair overall or just in specific areas. This is a great process for the timid or first time blondes. I should also mention "hair low lights" here. The same processes are used, however, instead of lightening the hair, this is adding darker shades of blondes or warmer browns. Hair coloring has come a long way recently and a talented hair colorist can weave two, sometimes three different natural looking hair colors into your hair creating beautiful effects.
You will get consistently better results leaving hair coloring to professional colorist. A good hair stylist will be able to pick out the hair colors that work best with your skin tones. Application can be tricky also. Your hair porosity will determine how long colors should be left on. Even touching up roots can be tricky. Almost all hair will benefit by using a clarifying shampoo before coloring.
I realize some of you just don't have the time or money to spend at a hair style salon and will decide to hair color at home. If you do decide to color your at home by yourself with a store bought hair product , remember that the actual hair shade you will achieve will vary from the picture on the box. I would recommend following the directions exactly, and taking the time to do a test to determine if you will get the result you expect before any damage is done.
Whatever type of hair color you opt for, choosing the proper range of shades—warm or cool—is the key. The right hair color shade will brighten up your hair style . . . and your life.
What is the most basic principle of color theory applied to hair? It's choosing between warm and cool shades—and with the dizzying variety of hair colors available, choosing can sometimes be confusing. The best way to make pleasing hair color choices is to determine whether natural coloring—hair, eye, and skin tones—is in the warm or cool range of colors. Answer these questions, or better yet, have your best friend give you her opinion, which is likely to be more accurate
My eyes are:
Deep brown or black-brown (Cool)
Golden brown (Warm)
Gray blue or dark blue (Cool)
Green, green blue or turquoise (Warm)
Hazel with gold or brown flecks (Warm)
Hazel with white, gray or blue flecks (Cool)
My skin is:
Very dark brown (Cool)
Brown with pink undertone (Warm)
Brown with golden undertone (Warm)
True olive (most Asians and Latinos) (Cool)
Medium with no color in cheeks (Cool)
Medium with faint pink cheeks (Cool)
Medium with golden undertones (Cool)
Pale with no color in cheeks (Cool)
Pale with pink undertones (Cool)
Pale with peach or gold undertones (Warm)
Freckled (Warm)
Ruddy (Warm)
Brown or bronze when I tan (Cool)
Golden brown, when I tan (Warm)
My hair color is:
Blue black (Cool)
Deepest coffee brown (Cool)
Medium ash brown (Cool)
Deep brown with gold or red highlights (Warm)
Medium golden brown (Cool)
Red (Warm)
Strawberry blond (Warm)
Dishwater blond (Cool)
Golden blond (Cool)
Salt and pepper (Cool)
White (Cool)
Gray with a yellow cast (Warm)
Did you check mostly cools? If so, your natural tones are in the cool spectrum. Mostly warms? Then you're naturally "warm."
Cool
Naturally cool people should avoid gold, yellow, red and bronze tones, which have a tendency to make you look sallow and drawn. The best hair color shades, depending on your skin tone, are shiny raven-wing blacks, cool ash browns, and cool blondes in shades ranging from mink to platinum and icy white. You're fortunate to be able to wear many exciting "unnatural" colors . . . lipstick reds, burgundies, and orchids, for a more daring look.
Warm
Naturally warm people should avoid blue, violet, white and jet-black hair, which will seem to "wash out" your natural high hair color. Depending on your skin tone and your preference, you'll find that deep chocolate, rich golden browns, auburn, warm gold, red highlights, and golden blond shades enhance your "sunny" look. Hair weaving and hair highlighting are great ways to add warm tones to your hair color—and natural-looking corals, oranges and reds are dazzling on you!
2006-12-03 16:16:06
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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CARMEL OR A LIGHT CARMEL
IT IS A DARKER BLONDE..REALLY PRETTY I HAVE THEM AND IT LOOKS GREAT BUT I AM A BRUNETTE.
2006-12-03 16:12:45
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answer #6
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answered by shoppingmaniac28 2
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