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I dyed my hair at a salon & it went brassy. I went back and they put a brown over it but it was still so brassy and i didnt want to go back because the salon was so far away.
I went to a hair shop and they offered me a light ash brown permanent (with 10v peroxide) and said it would just get rid of the brassiness & promised me it wouldnt go darker. Now my hair is even darker than before i had dyed it! i want to get my hair back to the previous color (even if its brassy)
can i do this? the lady at the shop told me some of the ash would wash out after a week or so, especially if i use bi-carb soda but i dont trust her. Its been a week & ive washed my hair like crazy!! its still looks the same. Is there a way to lighten my hair?
use the peroxide she gave me? whats the cheapest way -im broke!!

2007-02-14 00:44:34 · 7 answers · asked by Cathy 1 in Beauty & Style Hair

7 answers

There are some commercial products to remove dye from hair, and a few home potions and processes.

Color Fix by Jheri Redding is designed to remove unwanted permant hair color, and controlled usage allows color correction to specific areas, either full or slight color corrections.

Loreal Color Zap gently washes away all permanent haircolor. Ideal for color correction, removal of dark shades, muddy, uneven results or color build up. Leaves hair ready for immediate re-coloring. Loreal Effasol Color Remover washes away permanent haircolor, leaving hair ready for recoloring. Can be used with water or developer.

Jerome Rusell's Punky Color Punk Off is an easy to use gel that will cleanse your skin from hair dye stains.

Roux Clean Touch is a gentle formula that removes haircolor from skin and scalp. Removes excess color from hair ends and assists in removing stains from clothing.

Home remedies include this one:

Hot Oil treatments, hairspray, shampooing and exposure to water will gradually fade hair dye.

To remove the last bit of residue or stain on the hair (or to get color out immediately) make up a small batch of bleach mixture and add it to 2 tablespoons or so of shampoo in a cup. Stir it up.

Shampoo your hair with this mixture, "kneading" the hair. Start at the roots and work your way down to the end, and then back up.

You should see the color disappear right before your eyes.
http://ezinearticles.com/?how-to-remove-...

2007-02-21 09:45:47 · answer #1 · answered by mrs sexy pants 6 · 0 0

A trick used in salons to lift out color is to use a bleach cap shampoo. It's a tricky process but works well. It may be wise to have someone help you with this. First, shampoo the hair and rinse. (Apply gloves.) Second, using equal parts shampoo, 20-40 volume peroxide, and powder bleach work into the hair like shampoo focusing on the darkest areas. (The peroxide works to break up the deposited color - mixed with the shampoo and damp hair dilutes the product making the results easier to control. The reason I say you may want help is because you need to watch the hair during this process.) Rinse thoroughly. You may need to go over this step several times before you acheive your desired results. Once you feel comfortable with the amount of color lifted out of the hair, rinse thoroughly and deep condition.

2007-02-14 01:39:54 · answer #2 · answered by nikirio 2 · 0 0

to tone crimson down, you need to use a brown colour. the final is to take a tone close on your organic hair shade or a colour darker, prepare it and the crimson would be darkened. the challenge on the 2nd is that your highlights incorporate much less pigments than the the remainder of your hair - you may fill those up. easily, i don't get it why the semi everlasting colour in trouble-free terms lasted a week. it could have lasted longer, a minimum of four weeks. besides, you have have been given 3 options: a million. purchase a semi everlasting colour kit (Garnier Nutrisse is very sturdy) and prepare. i think of, it is going to final longer than the colour the salon took, and in my view, i'd start up with this. 2. purchase a lasting colour kit and prepare. 3. get a vegetal / plant colour like henna. i do no longer advise this for ecological motives, yet via fact henna colour includes colour pigments that are such as those in human hair. the humorous difficulty is, the henna colour pigments get completely into your hair shape. the greater generally you prepare (generally each 6 to eight weeks) the greater extreme the colour gets. i'd start up and spot what the semi everlasting will do, and in case you're no longer happy, then attempt henna colour (colour "Chatain/ Chestnut", i think) - yet wait 2 weeks between the semi and the henna! sturdy success!

2016-10-02 03:07:45 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

OH, MY GOD! I am surprised your hair hasn't fallen out after so many chemicals!
Just leave it honey! ther is nothing you can do without seriously damaging your hair soo... leave it the way it is and eventually it will all wash out and then you can give it the right treatment with no dye and lots of nurishing and mousturizing condishiners.
I'm telling you just leave it and don't put anymore chemicals into yur hair!

2007-02-21 06:09:38 · answer #4 · answered by robeangirl 2 · 0 0

mix equal parts of developer, water, and shampoo and shampoo your hair with it.
towel dry your hair, apply conditioner (leave in for 3 - 5 minutes at least) , rinse with cool water.
and make sure to use a good professional shampoo. nothing like panteene or suave or any other grocery store crap.
then stop messing with it.

2007-02-14 00:59:13 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

check the links below for * Hair coloring tips
http://homebeautytips.blogspot.com/2006/12/hair-color-tips.html#name1

2007-02-14 01:15:52 · answer #6 · answered by Natural 3 · 0 0

Use hydrogen peroxide

2007-02-20 09:40:01 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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