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Hair highlights at home?



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Highlighting your at home, very little margin for error

My heart breaks every time I read the comments on my blog in the hair coloring posts particularly those about highlighting hair and the disasters that stem from attempting to do hair highlighting or lowlights at home. Just don’t do it! It is a disaster waiting to happen, your chances of success are minimal at best. Even in the hands of a professional hair highlighting can be trickyEven in the hands of a professional hair highlighting can be tricky. My recommendation is that if you cannot afford to have it done professionally . . . don’t do it until you can.

The problem is two fold in that, by trying to save a few bucks by coloring your hair at home, you can easily end up with a problem only redeemable by paying $100.00 or more to get it repaired in a hair style salon. If money is a factor, go to a hair styling school in your area. They will do much better than you would ever be able to do yourself. The instructors will overlook and advise the student hair stylist doing the corrective coloring of the right hair color formula and application needed.

I choose a topic from time to time from the comment section that I think will be of interest to most of my readers, Here is such a comment:

I recently got highlights using the foil method, I chose a medium golden brown color, it turned out looking copper, why is this? also I had a semi-permanent color a year ago, the top part of my hair got the copper tone but the ends remained dark, what do I have to do in order for the color to get to the ends?

Comment by ursh — March 20, 2006

,,

I’m making a post from your comment Ursh, because it mirrors the problems of many do-it-yourselfers.

The best recommendation for you, at this point, is to have a professional fix it. They will need to see your hair, before being able to tell you how much it will cost. Believe me, at this point, you will only make it worse by trying to fix it yourself.

So, why would a medium golden brown hair color turn out copper? The answer lies in what color your hair was to begin with and if there was any highlight in it. In retail hair coloring products, if you had golden shades or gray in your hair, a medium golden brown, will pull up reddish tones.

Now for the second part of your question; what do I have to do in order for the color to get to the ends?

You already realize the color you used had no effect on the ends. You will need a different formula to lighten the ends of your hair because they are a different color than the roots. Not only that, it will need to be matched to the color you have on the roots, and carefully applied as to not overlap onto the already colored roots. Does that make sense?

You can see it gets touchy!

I understand wanting to color your hair at home, I did it too, before I had professional experience, but my best advice to you is this:

1. Leave highlighting, lowlighting, or major color changes to the professionals.

2. Start slow with home color, use, tone on tone, no peroxide colors and semi- permanent colors. Make no major color changes, using home color, unless you have experience.

3. Read all directions.

4. Do a strand test (this would have prevented the above problem)

Got a question, war story or comment about this topic? Click on the "Leave Your Comments" link at the very bottom of this article. Some of my best ideas for future articles come from reading reader comments. I'd love to hear from you!

Related Articles
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  • Hair highlighting and lowlighting that goes bad
  • Hair Color Too Dark?
  • A Highlighting Tip From American Salon Magazine
  • Brown Haircolor Correction
  • Walk the Line, Hair Styling
  • Celebrity Hairstylists on Spring Hair Color Trends


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    4 Comments »

    1. I agree - at home highlights can be difficult to do and if you don’t have experience working with color you should really seek out a professional colorist.

      Every couple of years I get into the highlight mode and do my own but after many years of practice and knowing how long to leave in the stuff I’ve become a pro. Unless your willing to wear your mistake don’t do it!

      Comment by Busted — April 7, 2006 @ 11:32 pm

    2. hi there!

      I am in a huge fix!my original hair color is very dark/black borwn and i had my hair in ash blonde streaks with a warm coffee brown base.This time, when i got them re-done/touched through a new hair dresser, it turned out to be a starnge orangish golden on the highlights which i abhorred but couldnt get rid of because the hairdresser told me that it would snap the hair if she tried to apply the peroxide again coz she has already applied a very high strength on my hair but still it didnt take the lighter color.
      my question is, didnt she know it before hand that my hair wont take the ash blonde shade?

      she has given me a two weeks time before she would re-do the foils…i have to live with that horrible orange for the next two weeks..do you suggest what should she do?which strength of peroxide/color would actually “appear” on my hair?
      do you recomend any brands?

      please reply…

      honey.

      Comment by honey — June 2, 2006 @ 6:21 am

    3. hello, I had my hair colored about 5 days ago at a salon. My natural hair color is a medium strawberry blond with more red tones than blond. I asked for a light reddish brown. It looks okay however I did want it a bit lighter. The stylist used the following for my color. 3\4 oz. 5GR, 3\4 oz. 8GR and 1\2 oz. 7N. (all combined = 20 Vol). My question is: Can I use L’Oreal Paris 2-in-1 Color (step 1) and Highlights (step 2) Couleur Experte for Redheads so soon after I had it colored professionally. NOTE:( I only want to use the hightlights. Step 2). Please Reply ASAP, Thank-You! Bonnie Krichbaum

      Comment by Bonnie Krichbaum — November 17, 2007 @ 6:11 am

    4. very interesting, but I don’t agree with you
      Idetrorce

      Comment by Idetrorce — December 15, 2007 @ 6:21 am

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