Blending With A Darker Hue Dyeing your hair with a darker shade can help neutralize and counteract the unevenness caused by bleaching.
Re-Dye the Hair a Darker Colour
Now, we understand you might be a bit nervous to put more dye on your hair after your bleaching disaster. However, dyeing your hair a darker colour is the fastest way to resolve badly bleached hair.
The fastest method is to use another, darker hair dye to cover the unevenly bleached hair. If you bleached your hair to a medium blond, for example, you could cover it with a light brown. To fix uneven bleached hair you can either dye your hair in a darker color or bleach it again. Dye your Hair in a Darker Color.
- Apply the bleach to your roots, starting about half an inch from the scalp to avoid overheating the scalp. - Check the roots every 5-10 minutes. Process until they reach a pale yellow color (typically 20-40 minutes, depending on the hair type and desired lift). - Rinse thoroughly and shampoo.
You should always apply your bleach mixture to your mid lengths and ends first, and then go back to your roots. Working through each section, saturate the mid-lengths and ends of your hair with your bleach mixture.
Start dyeing at the roots.
Let the hair color develop for the amount of time indicated on packaging directions. Then comb it through the rest of your hair to distribute it evenly and avoid a two-tone effect. Work in four to six sections like salon pros do (use hair clips as you go if you wish) to ensure full coverage.
Solution to Highlight Discrepancies: One of the easiest ways to correct blotchy highlights is to do an overall color with a hue darker than the current shade of your hair.
You would want to replace the pigment that is missing from the hair. If it is white you would want to add a formula with red, copper and yellow as your hairs melanin is missing and it needs a base to stick to.
If your lousy bleach job has come out more yellow, you'll need a purple toner. Purple shampoo can help neutralize the yellow. If your hair is orange, you'll need a blue toner. Try a blue shampoo to tone the brassiness and get rid of the orange.
Usually, when I'm speaking with women who have just freshly bleached and toned their hair and found their roots are still yellow it's for one reason: You needed to leave the bleach on for longer. Otherwise, your toner really isn't going to do much.
In some cases, the only way to fix damaged hair is to give it time, about 6 weeks after bleaching to see if your hair starts to recover. In most cases, damaged hair will grow back healthy. There are also many treatments to help bring damaged hair back to life.
Some possible fixes include re-dying the hair (either the same colour or darker), nourishing your hair to improve the condition, using toner to touch up the patches, or using gloss treatments.
Highlights: For foil highlights via bleaching, she suggests waiting six to eight weeks—or until new growth is about 1 inch—to prevent overlap and maintain hair health. This also applies for treatments like balayage.
Hot roots – orange or yellow tones right around your scalp that are lighter than the rest of your hair – are the worst of the worst. Beyond not looking great, they can be difficult to fix. Unfortunately, hot roots are a common result for most people when lightening their hair for the first time.
Dyeing your hair with a darker shade can help neutralize and counteract the unevenness caused by bleaching. it's important to focus on the areas where the bleaching results are uneven. Apply the dye strategically to those sections, ensuring even coverage and seamless blending with the surrounding hair.
Use a purple or blue shampoo
Pick your toning shampoo based on the original colour of your hair before you applied the bleach. Blue and purple shampoos neutralise unwanted brassy tones to reveal a cooler blonde or light brown shade.
Try a Hair Mask and an Oil
Once the bleach is out and your hair is on the road to recovery, try to hydrate it as best you can. Kusero recommends treating hair with a weekly mask, taking a break from hot tools, and going as long as you can between washes to allow natural oils to coat the hair.
Toner gets rid of warm tones, so it's incredibly helpful for orange, red, or yellow splotches. It's also a less damaging process than bleaching your hair a second time, which is great.
If Your Highlights Look Sloppy
Alternate creating highlights on each side of your head, so one side doesn't become saturated with more highlighted strands than the other. If you've already attempted highlights and you're not thrilled with the results, you can go over your hair with one color to cover the highlights.
ROOT SMUDGE/shadow
Root shadowing is a low-maintenance hair color technique in which a darker shade is applied directly to the roots giving a soft, seamless contrast. It's a great way to refresh your look and give your hair color depth and dimension.
Certain harsh chemicals in popular box dyes have given many stylists pause. Common concerns include: Ammonia - This mixing agent lifts cuticles to deposit colour but is quite drying over time. Peroxide - High volumes like 30+ developer cause more damage to delicate hair.
Pick a lighter hair colour
A lighter colour will then look better. Your hair follicles produce less pigment as you're turning older. If there's no more pigment being produced in the hair follicles, your hair turns pigmentless.
It could be that your hair is resistant to tint, especially when the hair texture has changed as a result of going white. But also it could be that by going lighter, either all over, or by introducing (subtle) highlights you would not see the regrowth strip quite as quickly as if it were lighter.