Special Instructions

 SPECIAL INSTRUCTIONS 

Prior to your color service please purchase the following product,
the link to Amazon is provided.

Kerastase Nutritive Masquintense with Irisome Hair Thick Mask

PLEASE FOLLOW THESE INSTRUCTIONS:

Towel dry after washing, apply product, rinse with cold water.
DO NOT USE ANY HEAT STYLING (such as flat iron or blow drying)
If you have any further questions please use the link below.

Recommendation

 Recommendations for your hair care:

Please  let your hair air dry whenever possible, use heat minimally, and cover  your hair when in the sun to help preserve your color.

Use the coldest water possible when treating your hair. Shampoo with a Sulfate-free Shampoo. I recommend Kerastase Nutritive Masquintense with Irisome Hair Thick Mask as your conditioner. I also recommend you protect your hair with Joico Heat Hero Glossing Thermal Protector, before blow-drying or using hot tools.

In  the Cary, N.C. area, the well and public utility water are high in Iron  which impacts hair and can turn platinum or blond hair orange or a  horrible shade of rust. In order to keep your blonde hair cool tone, I  recommend Milk Shake Silver Shampoo, or you can add a Crystal Quest Shower Filter to your shower.

To achieve the best curls, the recommended curling iron is Hot Tools 1¼ inch

Products can be purchased on AMAZON and all the links are provided. I am not compensated in any way for recommending these products.

Hair Color Terms

 1. Basecolor: Color applied at the root area or all over before a dimensional/creative color technique is done.

2.  Contrast: Contrast is a value applied to highlights. High-contrast  highlights are much lighter than the surrounding hair and provide a  dramatic look. Lower contrast highlights result in a more natural look.

3.  Cool: Cool is a tonal value that can apply to blonde, brunette, and red  shades. A color is said to have “cool tones” if it tends toward blue,  violet, or green. Cool colors include platinum blondes, ash browns, and  plum reds.

4. Coverage: Coverage is a measure of a hair color’s  ability to cover gray. Some hair color formulations are too transparent  to effectively cover gray hair. Redken Color Gels Permanent Conditioning  Haircolor provides exceptional gray coverage with resistance to fading.

5.  Dimension: Dimension is a function of the range of tones in your hair. A  head of hair that is all one color is said to be “flat” or lacking  dimension. Your stylist can add dimension to your hair with highlights  or lowlights.

6. Double-process: A double-process color refers to  anytime two color services are done in one visit. Generally, this is  done by doing the first color service, washing and drying the hair, then  doing the second color. This can include lightening the hair then  applying a toner, or doing a permanent color followed by a glaze.

7.  Express Highlights: Express Highlights are done by applying a small  number of foils or painted-on pieces, usually focused on framing the  face.

8. Glaze: Glazes involve using a semi-permanent color to  enhance, enrich, change, match, tone down, or intensify natural or  color-treated hair while harmonizing contrast.

9. Hair Painting:  Hair Painting, also known as balayage, is the process of free-handing or  sweeping hair color, lightener, or toner downwards in soft strokes  directly on the surface of the desired section. This method is used to  create dimension with a natural, softer look.

10. Highlights:  Highlighting hair means isolating select strands in the hair and  treating them with a hair color or lightener to make them lighter than  its base/natural color. Highlights can add dimension by contrasting with  the rest of the hair and are created with foils, a cap, or special  combs or brushes used for “painting on” the color.

11. Lift: Lift  is the chemical process of lightening the color of the hair. Different  hair color formulations have different lifting abilities.

12.  Lowlights: Lowlights are created by using color with foils, caps, or  painted-on to darken specific pieces and create dimension. Generally,  low lights will be 2-3 levels darker than your base color and slightly  warmer. This can be used for a more natural look or to create accents  within the hair.

13. Rebalancing: Rebalancing is the process of  bringing the hair back into balance, and can be created with a  combination of highlights and lowlights, and/or glazes.

14.  Single-process:  A single process refers to any color service that is  done in one step. This can be using a permanent color that lifts and  deposits, a glaze, highlights/lowlights without toning, or a creative  color service with only one process.

15. Texture: Texture, as  defined by the diameter of an individual hair strand, is generally  described as fine, medium, or coarse. Your stylist will factor in your  hair’s texture when determining your best color formulation.

16.  Trend Pastel: Trend Pastel refers to the softened, lightened hues of  colors such as red, purple, green, orange, yellow, or blue. Pastel tones  of color are meant as colorants and toning shades and are best achieved  when applied to very pale blonde hair to create for example pink,  lavender, and mint green tones.

17. Tone: Tone, in hair coloring,  is the term used to describe a specific color—"golden” blonde,  “coppery” red, “ash” or brown. Colors are divided into warm tones and  cool tones.

18. Warm: Warm is a tonal value that can apply to  blonde, brunette, and red shades. A color is said to have “warm tones”  if it tends toward yellow, orange, or red. Warm colors include golden  blondes, auburn brunettes, and coppery. 

Specializing in Color Intricacies for over 30 years
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