Jennifer Aniston's Go-To Guy Explains 3 Do's (and 3 Don'ts) of Hair Color
- Try ombré . . . revised: Gone is the sharp-contrasted ombré color we were seeing just about everywhere. "What we're going to right now is an ombré look, but we're extending the natural base in the crown section. We're letting it grow in easily and deepening it with a gloss color, so that we don't cause any red tones," says Canale, adding, "We just keep the hairline bright, and we're trying to save the blond for the tips.
- Go for a gloss: "Demipermanent gloss is great for brunettes," he says. "It keeps the hair shiny and keeps the hair from actually fading." Color glosses are also great for preventing hair from settling into an unwanted red tone. Note: many brands sell glosses (aka glazes) at the drugstore, so you can do a similar treatment at home.
- Get highlights "lite": If you're on a budget, you don't need to spend a lot of money to get a noticeable change. "For a reasonable price, you can do a few highlights around the hairline and then have them blended into the hair. That gives a new look," Canale advises.
Hair Color Don'ts:
- Heavy contrast: What Canale doesn't like to see? "People with dark brown hair and white highlights. There are ways of blending things, and I don't like to see that stark light/dark."
- Base colors: "We try to stay away from base colors. It flaws the natural color, and once it's flawed, it will eventually get a red tone," says Canale. So essentially, you're always having to keep up with it. Tip: if you're covering grays, use a nonperoxide or semipermanent color to blend the gray, and add highlights to brighten.
- Chunky highlights: "The last thing you want to see is thick streaks behind somebody's hairline," explains Canale. "Highlights that peek out, those are always in, but they have to be thin." The exception? "Sometimes when you're starting someone into a blond, you have to do a little bit more, and the best place to do that is underneath," he clarifies.
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