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 Finding the Best Colour.

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PerplexPERFECTION™
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Join date: 2008-11-24
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PostSubject: Finding the Best Colour.   Mon Nov 24, 2008 5:02 am

If your Eyes are:
  • Deep brown or black-brown
    Gray blue or dark blue
    Hazel with white, gray or blue flecks

Skin Tone:
  • Very dark brown
    True olive (most Asians and Latinos)
    Medium with no color in cheeks
    Medium with faint pink cheeks
    Medium with golden undertones
    Pale with no color in cheeks
    Pale with pink undertones
    Brown or bronze when I tan

Hair:
  • Blue black
    Deepest coffee brown
    Medium ash brown
    Medium golden brown
    Dishwater blonde
    Salt and pepper
    White

If you were two or more of these, then you fall into the cool category. Naturally cool people should avoid gold, yellow, red and bronze tones in hair color. These warm tones have a tendency to make you look sallow and drawn. The best hair color shades, depending on your skin tone, are shinny raven-wing blacks, cool ash browns, cool blondes in shades ranging from mink to platinum and icy white. You're also fortunate enough to be able to wear many exciting "unnatural" hair colors like lipstick reds, burgundies, and orchids .

If your Eyes are:

  • Golden brown
    Green, green blue or turquoise
    Hazel with gold or brown flecks
    Skin Tone:
    Brown with pink undertone
    Brown with golden undertone
    Pale with peach or gold undertones
    Freckled
    Ruddy

Hair:
  • Deep brown with gold or red highlights
    Red
    Strawberry blonde
    Gray with a yellow cast
    Natural golden blonde

If you were two or more of these, then you fall into the warm category. You should avoid blue, violet, white and jet-black hair, ash based hair colors which will seem to "wash out" your natural color. Depending on your skin tone and your preferences, you'll find dark, warm browns, rich golden browns and auburn, warm gold and red highlights, and golden blond shades look best on you. Highlighting is a great way to add warm tones to your hair.


Another key factor is understanding tones and levels on color boxes. Tone refers to whether a hair color is warm or cool. The warm (golden) colors are red, orange and yellow. You may have noticed on some hair color boxes, there are references to "medium warm brown" or "natural golden blonde". This means the undertone of the color is warm - either red, orange, or yellow. These can be used to give hair a warmer look.
Tones on color boxes:
    G- Golden tone
    N- Neutral
    R- Red
    R-O- Red/Orange
    R-V- Red Violet
    V- Violet
    A- Ash
    B- Blue

The cool (ash) colors are blue, green, and violet/purple (same thing). When the hair color names refer to "dark ash blonde" and so forth, it means they have a green, blue, or purple undertone. These you should be careful with. If you put a green or blue undertone hair color on a warm color (especially a gold/yellow color) hair, you will come out with green.
Levels refer to the degree of lightness or darkness of a hair color with 1 being the lowest (black) and 12 being the highest (lightest blonde).


Colour Wheel and It's Role in This:

Now that you know whether you need a cool or warm tone and you understand tones and levels, you're ready for the next step. Understanding the natural pigment in your hair and adding artificial pigment (color product). This is where the color wheel comes into play.
Complimentary colors are colors opposite on the color wheel. Red-Green, Blue-Orange etc. What does this mean to you? Well, if you have golden blonde hair, your hair tone is either red, orange, or yellow warm tones. So if you put a cool colored tone on like ash. You're hair is most likely to turn green.
Look at the wheel. Let's say you have yellow under tones to your hair, and you want to cool it to an ash. You decide blue undertone ash toner will do, since it is a cool undertone. Well, by doing this you'll end up with green hair! As you can see, on the wheel that blue and yellow make green. If you want to cancel out whatever undertone you have, you should use the opposite color on the wheel. In other words, if you have brown hair with red highlights and you can't stand the red, then you would use the opposite color on the wheel to neutralize the red. In this case, the neutralizing color would be green (ash).

KEY TIPS FOR COLOURING AT HOME:

    * If you have artificial color in your hair (any color or tone) and you want to go lighter, doesn't matter how light, you will not accomplish this just by choosing a lighter shade. General rule of thumb in hair coloring is, hair color can't lift (or lighten) hair color. You can change the tone, but not the level (lightness) Go see a professional. See our Going Lighter section...

    * If you are going darker, choose a warm, golden tone or you might come out ashy.

    * If your grey is coming up too light, or the hair color is not covering the grey, let the color stay on your roots for at least 40 minutes or longer. Grey is very resistant and needs hair color to process longer. Check out Hair Coloring Tips if your grey is not covering well
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