![]() ![]() I assume I'm correct on these three points. developer) to my natural medium brown hair, it would've come out much better, if not perfect.ģ.) The only reason the salon dye didn't lighten the dark hairs much is because it was practically coloring over the box dye instead of coloring over the natural medium brown hair. ![]() LICECAP UNEVEN COLOR PLUSEither that, or I should've gone right to the beauty shop and bought a 30-volume developer plus hair dye.Ģ.) If I had applied the salon dye (with 30 vol. Please correct me if I'm wrong in any of the following conclusions I've drawn:ġ.) With my natural, virgin hair color being medium brown, I should have lightened it prior to applying the box dye, since the color I want is noticably lighter than my natural color. Now, I want to make sure I learned something from this whole experience. It might help to tone your roots a bit by using a blue shampoo and/or conditioner.Thank you for your insights. I'd suggest picking up a protein conditioner, like joico kpak. Your hair might seem ok now, but it can sometimes take up to a month for peroxide damage to show. You're processing multiple times in a short amount of time and that typically equals damage. I wouldn't keep trying to fix it with permanent dye. If that's where your concern lies, I think the problem is that the heat from your scalp is making the dye work faster at your roots. It honestly doesn't look too uneven, except that you have hot roots. My hair is very healthy, and now that I've colored it twice within a few days it doesn't seem to have damaged it at all. Applying pure developer? Bleach? Try honey lightening? I'm not sure if I should try it, and if yes, what the best way would be. That way they would blend in perfectly with the roots. The darker parts just need to be a shade lighter, and that's it. I'm not sure if I should try a third attempt at correcting this. Now I don't have any "before" pictures, but I have three pictures of how it looks right now: I'm not sure why the darker parts didn't lighten more, seeing how it's 30-volume developer, and I left it on for thirty minutes.Ī) Maybe the dye underneath caused the problem?ī) Maybe my hair is just very resistant, and I should've left the color on for 45 minutes, or I should've used 40-volume developer instead? It is much more even than before, but the roots are still much more intense than the rest. The dark parts are definitely lighter, the the roots don't look as orange as before. The result: Much better, but not what I was hoping for. I carefully applied the color to everything but the roots, and then after waiting 20 minutes I applied color to the roots, and waited another 10 minutes. I went to the beauty store and bought a tube of very similar color (a bit lighter), and 30-volume developer. Two days later, I decided to try and "fix" this uneven mess. ![]() Perhaps it was combination of these two factors, who knows. although I'm pretty sure I covered all of my hair. ![]() The problem also might have something to do with me dying my hair myself and maybe missing several spots. Not sure if it's allowed per forum rules to comment negatively about a specific product, so I won't mention what it was, until someone tells me it's allowed. I'm not sure why it turned out that way, but it might have something to do with the fact that about 80% of reviews of this product say the result is an uneven color. Some parts were alright, others were somewhat darker, and yet others seemed completely unaffected. The result was an uneven, patchy mess, with extremely light roots. I wanted a light coppery red, so I bought some dye in a box and dyed my hair. I'm a guy, and I'm not sure if there are many men on this forum. ![]()
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