![]() I rubbed in in the ends first like it said. The stuff smelt a bit like a weak bleach. The 2bottles still wern't enough to do my head fully!!! all my hair is done except for my hair line at the front. Dyed once over bleach yellow hair with perm dye 2-3months ago Some pigments are a lot stronger than others and more prone to staining the actual hair (e.g atomic pink vs a blue), and that would be what makes it last a lot longer and seem 'permanent'. A veggie colour only sits just under the cutictle, meaning it is inevitable that it will be rinsed out. There is no "developer" with them, so they don't shrink and grow, right? ![]() Oh, I see! So the veggie dyes are not the same though. So when you use a colour remover, you shrink the molecule so it can be rinsed out of the hair. When the developer stops working the molecules grow big again so they can't move out of the cortex. When it is mixed with developer it turns tiny so it can fit under the cortex, thus making it permanent. They reverse the colouring process- When a molecule is in the can, it is really big. They only affect the unnatural molecule, as these are the ones which are 'activated' by developer. ![]() I once had half my black hair made red, and it cost me 85 quid. However, if someone came in and had used a generic box brand then they would still use their brand on the client's hair. Goldwell, Wella et cetera) as they work best when used with the same brands. Lorny wrote:Well salons use the brands of the tint they use (e.g. ![]() And Colorfix, which foams a bit when mixed and spreads very well, actually had enough in one box for three applications." I needed two boxes for my past-the-shoulders hair. I'd only recommend using Colorzap at home if products that only remove colour without bleaching don't work well enough (this one is very powerful and will almost certainly do the job!), or if you know you want a significantly lighter haircolour, and your roots have not grown out.Īlso of note: This stuff does NOT spread well through the hair. You can also use these other products easily if you have roots, as they won't bleach the natural hair. If you use Colorzap to try to get your original haircolour back, you'll have to dye the hair after removing colour, when with another product only one step (removal) might have been required. These products only remove dye and don't bleach, so they actually have the potential to get you back to your virgin haircolour (dark permanent dyes often don't lighten hair, so your real haircolour is still there under the dye). To remove haircolour without lightening, try another colour remover like Colorfix (by One n' Only), or Color Oops. (Yes, this happened to me when I used it expecting it wouldn't bleach like it said on the box. By the time this has been on the hair long enough to remove the dye from the dyed part of the hair, the roots will be VERY bleached, so if this touches the roots at all you'll have a line of blonde/white hair where it hits the roots. So be careful! If roots have grown out at all, this would not be suitable for home use, as you have to be VERY careful not to get it on the roots. However, it also lightens natural hair, even though it indicates it won't on the box. "Well this does work very well to remove haircolour. I had a look for reviews, having not used it myself but being interested for future reference and I found this one on Amazon which I thought to be fairly helpful ![]()
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