Tuesday, October 26, 2021

Colouring your life: All you need to know about keeping curly hair healthy after a colouring job

The colouration of your hair is a chemical process that alters much more than the flavour of your hair – especially if natural curls bless your hair. Of course, the first order of business is to book your colourist consultation. The consultation should be a discussion about information collection and honesty on both sides. Before the meeting, you should email the colourist an inspiration photo of the colour you want to attain, as well as one of your existing hair colours.

Preparation

Once you've both decided on a colour, there are several pre-appointment steps you may take to improve your results before the appointment. First, the day before your significant appointment, shampoo and detangle your hair. Everybody wants clean hair free of heavy oils and other items that could prevent the colour from penetrating. If your curl patterns range from type 2 to 3, you can go to the salon with your curl in its natural state. It's preferable to go in with tight coils extended out for type 4 curls. This makes the application of the product easier and results in less straining on your scalp. 

The Color Theory

At the beginning of the dying procedure, the treatment lifts and expands the hair cuticle, allowing the colour to penetrate more deeply. However, it causes moisture to escape, resulting in dry hair. Consider your hair's cuticle layer as a pine cone. The pine cone is tight and sealed with virgin hair. The developer used in colouring services opens the cuticle layer, allowing the pigment to penetrate, and the cuticle is always lifted. This makes Black hair, which is naturally drier and more fragile, even more, sensitive and prone to breakage. All coloured hair is impacted, mainly when lighteners are used. If you don't follow a treatment scheme, your hair is likely to break, especially when you have type 3 or 4 curls.

Maintaining Your Hair

It is best to avoid hot temperatures to keep the colour in freshly tinted hair. You open your cuticle a little bit every time you pass a pinch over your hair or snuggle it, which will cause the colour to fade. Diffusing is less harmful because hot air does not touch your strands directly, but air drying and squeezing are great for colour-keeping. There is also the minimum heat rule in the shower. Using cooler water can assist keep the cuticle shut, maintaining colour for longer in your strands. What you do to care for your hair has a significant impact on how well your colour-treated curls recover and maintain their brilliance. Investing in a hat or sleeping with a silk or satin pillowcase overnight will help to reduce frizz and keep curls moisturized.

Certainties

Think of the whole procedure running at home? Sadly, hair professionals do not advocate curling at home. Tell a stylist you trust who will help you and give you the best recommendations if your heart is set on Dying. Experts strongly advocate only the type that will fade over several shampoos to use a semi-permanent recipe. Purchase several packs to ensure that you have sufficient products to work through dense curls. When shopping, consider two cases with short to medium hair and four cases with medium to long hair. Before mixing something into your mane, test a patch and strand on your head to ensure you aren't allergic to the formula. Then, experiment with several areas of your head to see what the result will be.

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