I bleached her hair using 30vol developer and L’Oréal Super Oreal Blanc Powder Bleach, then dyed using Color Jamz in Not So Shy Violet (I find it deposits color more boldly than Manic Panic). We broke up the color by creating an ombré effect, applying bleach higher up midway through the bleaching process. The photos are shown after some of the color rinsed out.
- Use a 30vol developer (this is not to be applied to the scalp: use 20vol).
- I highly recommend L’Oréal Super Oreal Blanc Bleach Powder over others, as it lifts 7 levels (especially for dark hair).
- Use a measuring cup for a precise mixture. A hair dye brush, hair clips, and rat tail comb come in very handy.
- Do not bleach to a white blonde or platinum, you want a pale yellow blonde (the photo was dark & hair is wet).
- If you’re going for a pastel color, then bleach the hair to platinum- but beware white hair handles colors much differently.
- Do separate the hair into sections and use foils– if you apply it on all the hair at once you will get an uneven color and it will not lift properly.
- Rinse with cold water: if you’re dying your hair in an ombré or dip dye, or are dying extensions, try rinsing it in an ice bath to lock the color in (not recommended you do this if you’re going to the root). Don’t feel as if you need to rinse until the water runs clear.
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b7Czf9eEp1Y&w=560&h=315]
See my post: On Going Blonde
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Published by Perry Uwanawich
Perry Uwanawich is an American fashion designer and illustrator- AuricWear.com; fashion, beauty, and lifestyle blogger at Subversive.Style; and Spirituality Lifestyle Blogger at TheGypsyMystic.com. Perry has a Bachelor of Science in Marketing from The Wayne Huizenga School of Business and Entrepreneurship, two certifications in Fashion Design and Industrial Sewing, and has a background in graphic design, marketing, journalism, and fashion design.
Perry Uwanawich launched two fashion collections, the first called Deity Greek Wear, while enrolled full-time in college, and the second in 2020 called Auric Wear available at AuricWear.com and on Etsy. While pursuing a Certification in Fashion Design, Marketing, Public Relations, and Photography, he became the Parsons Teen Vogue Ambassador and created multimedia content which was included in the course. He completed another Certification in Industrial Sewing and was placed as an Industrial Sewing Machine Operator in a Rhode Island mill, working in production sewing for Military, Bags, and Medical Health industries.
Perry Uwanawich has worked in retail, acted as a graphic designer for multiple brands creating graphic prints for screenprinted garments. His marketing experience spans several industries from Fashion to Media, Medical Billing to the Medical Field- he's created graphics, logos, digital and print media assets, designed and managed websites (HTML, XHTML, CSS, WordPress…), managed social media accounts, and created marketing campaigns and ad campaigns which drove significant traffic in the local and national markets for respective industries. He has experience with photo and video editing, re-touching, motion graphics, and also worked as a freelance makeup artist working in Beauty as well as SFX makeup.
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