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Best Hair Dye Color For A Biracial Girl

Hair color ideas for biracial girls?

I've seen so many African American women or girls trying to pull off the light or blonde hair look, it looks horrible and unnatural in most cases. But I'm really bored of my same old brown hair, I dyed the ends a burgundy color last school year so I can't do red again, but what should I do? Pic; http://twitter.com/#!/LoveeDiandra/status/232295655350087681
Thanks in advance.

CAN MIXED RACE GIRLS BLEACH THERE HAIR!?

So yeah, im mixed race, got real tight curls, wouldn't say afro.
Dye it alot, but i want it bright red, like rhiana!
Can i bleach my hair? whats the best way to get it that bright?
THANKYOU

Why does blonde hair dominate so often in biracial kids?

I saw a black mom who was Brown skinned at the store just now with a son who looked like a blonde Portuguese boy because he had tan skin and white features and very blonde hair. My cousins were the same way from my Aunt, she's Brown skinned and her kids are half german from their dad and her oldest son was toehead as a kid and has dirty blonde hair as an adult. If blacks have dark hair, how do so many biracials have light hair? I see this all the time with biracial kids because theyre all over my city these days. I don't understand because I thought blonde hair was recessive and supposedly dying off.

My biracial daughter has hair lice...Any advice??

Be very careful using pesticides on a baby!!

Headlice can be smothered with oil-based products, like conditioner or even mayonaise. Combing out the nits will be a little easier with lots of oil in the hair anyway.

Check out the following website before you buy a toxic product like RID and pour in on your baby's skin, the pesticides in it have been implicated in causing serious illnesses in children.
http://www.headlice.org/index.html

What colour of hair would fit a mixed race person?

Mixed races are ALWAYS attractive and exotic, you are so lucky!

But when it comes to hair color what matters the most are these things:

- Your skin tone (warm: golden hues, yellowish hues/ or cool: rosy etc...) If you look better with golden colors, bright yellow, orange, etc... Then you are warm, if you look better with dark purple, cool blue, silver and white, then you are cool. A good start is your natural hair color, stay no darker or lighter than 2-3 shades from it...


-Your eyebrow color: Same here, your eyebrown need to always be DARKER than your hair color. And they need to be close enough to your hair color and need to match...

- Now you have a list of what suits you best, choose among these colors... In this range of colors that look good on you, choose what you 1) Like (regardless or fashion) 2) what suits your budget and lifestyle (don't get pink highlights when you are the CEO of a company, or a sophisticated color that needs maintenance every 3 weeks when you can afford to go to the salon only one every 3 months!)

If you post a picture we will be able to help you better! However, you can still ask your mom, sister if you have any or friends that you trust.

Good luck, and remember mixed race = hottie!! :)

Would you put a perm/relaxer on a bi-racial child's hair?

I hate when people relax children's hair, it is equivalent to a mother dyeing her daughters hair platinum blond, because she think it would look better. Most parents would never do this. But relaxing some how has become acceptable.

Also, relaxed hair requires care just as much as natural hair.

-I suggest you go to a black hairstylist, and have them teach you how to manage your daughters hair texture. If you can't afford that go to www.napptruality.com, this site will help you learn what products and techniques to use to manage natural hair.

-You can go to a stylist and they can cut out some of the bulk in your daughters hair to make it more manageable as well.

Products/Links:
-Baka Beauty natural laxer plus ( non chemical, does not straighten hair just makes manageable www.treasuredlocks.com)
-Palmer's olive oil hair conditioner
-Palmer's Hair care line
-Carol's Daughters
-Miss Jessies, products created by two biracial sisters
-Sista's Place has lines specifically made for children
Biracial hair care:
http://www.treasuredlocksfaqs.com/active...

What are the best products for my teenage daughter to dye her hair pink or purple over the summer? It needs to be waterproof to stand up to surfing in August, but completely out by the time the term restarts in September.

You can’t have it both ways with fashion color dyes.Not to mention, depending on your daughter’s hair color and health could effect which dyes or process is needed for coloring her hair as well.No hair dye, fashion color, permanent or not, will be able to stay 100% true to color plus handle the salt, water and sun combo involved in surfing. Not to mention it sounds like you want it to only last for a couple of weeks (August to September).That being said, Manic Panic is designed to come out easily. It is what someone I know uses on her daughters’ blonde hair in the summer to be out by school. It’s gentle, cheap, has pink and purple and should be easy enough to apply and remove, unless you need to bleach the hair first.You may be better off taking your daughter to a professional colorist who is trained in fashion colors and having a consult. That way the colorist can see the hair color, texture, and health of your daughter’s hair and discuss options.

What happens if I mixed natural black and red hair dye together?

Greetings,When you take a natural black, especially if it a solid level 1 and mix red dye with it, which is a much lighter color on the scale, it’s possible that all you would have is black dye.You might get a hint of red, but my money is on black holding its own against any red dye you might mix with it.When in doubt, mix the colors and apply to a small swatch of sample hair to test the actual results.If you like to try various dye mixtures and combinations you might want to invest in an inexpensive mannequin with human hair. That way you can mix dye and experiment to see the results before applying them to a live subject.Even better, consult with a professional hair color expert who may know some tricks about mixing dyes.Best wishes to you.DISCLAIMER: I neither sell nor promote any companies, their products, nor do I have any online shopping outlet of my own to promote. What I write is based on my own experience and belief in the techniques I share.

Does Splat Hair Dye Work on African American Hair?

Yes! It definitely works. I have used it for the past several months. If you are a brunette you'll have to bleach your hair first to get the exact color on the box. I would recommend buying Ion "Color Brilliance" and "Sensitive Scalp Creme Developer" for bleaching. (I got them from Sally's.) This is because this brand offers a less harsh process than the bleach that comes with "Splat". Also, depending on the amount of hair you want to dye you will need to purchase more bleach. My natural hair color is the darkest brown before you get to black and I had to bleach my hair three times in order to get it light enough to get the lavender color advertised. It's really important though to space out the bleachings or your hair can fall out. I did mine about four days apart and my hair is fine, but a week or more is recommended. After you bleach and dye you should get a conditioner with silk protein. You shouldn't shampoo the bleached sections for a while, just condition them to get them back to their original healthy state.

Have fun! I LOVE PURPLE!

Is brown or blonde hair natural to Korean and Japanese people?

Well, really North European type blond is not “normal” except for some biracial kids. However, there are -sorry for the word - pure Japanese who have light brown or reddish hair. A former exchange student of ours had a girl at her school who had brown hair. Our exchange daughter thought at first that the girl was biracial but she was not. The girl got quite harrassed by one teacher who didn’t want to believe that colour was natural. Fortunately, the parents could show her some early childhood pictures and prove the naturalness of her hair colour.Today at my kids’ elementary school’s sportsfest hubby and I saw a little girl with visibly light brown hair so we thought that that kid may be biracial, too. I approached her parents only to learn that the girl was as “pure” Japanese as a kid could be even though brownish-reddish hair seems to run in the husband’s family. And they don’t know of any foreign DNA “input” in earlier times so it may be just some mutation.The parents told me that the girl’s older cousin also has brownish-reddish hair, and her high school had honestly forced her to colour it black. (Which totally goes against the colouring prohibition, which is supposed to protect young students’ hair from damage by hair colouring. ) It made me so angry to hear, and the three of us discussed that just in case it should happen to my kids or their daughter, we would complain about that. I do hope for the little girl’s sake that the parents then still have the courage to do that. If any future school ever dared to say anything in that direction, they will at least get to know my fury.

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