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Unchanged Hair When I Dyed It. Help

Can white chocolate be dyed with kool-aid?

It's possible, I guess, but that doesn't sound like something I would want to eat.

Is there a way of permanently changing your hair color? I mean by pigment implant or something.

Permanent hair coloring means "permanently" changing the color of the original hair instead of permanently fading. The general "permanent hair coloring" can last 6-8 weeks to keep the color basically unchanged, or undergo 16-20 shampoos.After dyeing hair, it is necessary to make up for it in time. When the new hair grows 2-3 cm, it should go to the professional hair salon to make up.Refining is both the process of consolidating hair color and the process of hair care.If you need to, you can follow my blog:Modern Show BIOG.There is more wig knowledge waiting for you to discover and explore.

Since you can dye liquids/solids, why can't you dye air?

When you dye liquids, you are suspending dye molecules between the molecules and compounds in that liquid. The compounds themselves are not dyed. Water molecules, (Hydrogen and Oxygen) are many hundreds of times smaller than the compounds that make a colorful dye. The color can be removed from the water by letting it evaporate; the dye will fall to the bottom of the container as a powder. It did not change the water.Air is much the same, except you have the gas form of oxygen, nitrogen, and a few other trace gasses. Gas forms of substances are spread out widely (compared to liquid or solids), so there isn’t enough substance (mass) for the dye molecules to “sit on” in the air. The dye molecules are much larger and heavier, and they simply fall to the ground. The nitrogen and oxygen in the air remain unchanged, and uncolored.

Is there a double standard when it comes to men coloring their hair?

Oh definitely.This is generalizing, of course, but when a woman dyes her hair, it’s about playing around with her style, personal expression, or simply looking attractive. Some women go through dozens of major color hair changes during their lifetime, or even several times a year. There is an enormous amount of variety in branded box women’s hair dyes.Compared to women, men are far less likely to radically change their hair color— around 7% of American men dyed their hair last year compared to 65% for women. When they do dye their hair, there’s more pressure for it to look natural or even unchanged. The branded box dyes that are sold for men have less variety and lean towards a handful of natural colors.(It’s also silly that we have gender-specific box hair color since there’s no real difference in the ingredients or how they are used.)So why the double standard?What it seems to come down to is the idea that “men aren’t supposed to care about their appearance.”That’s an idea that I’ve gotta call baloney on. There are totally men that care about their appearance— maybe a few truly, utterly don’t, but many do and that’s OK. (Could say the same about women, honestly.) Dyeing ones hair means nothing about who you are as a person, nor does it influence your masculinity.

Is curly hair of african descent ?

I know some whites have curly hair and mexicans too but majority have straight and some kids i know of mixed black and white have curly hair so it must make sense if they do but yet again everyone has african dna.

Does redken bleach expire?

we bought it A LONGGGGG time ago, like almost 5 years ago???? it wasn't mixed/opened. i tried bleaching my hair today and i feel like there was no change in my hair color, and i left it on for about 40 minutes as it said in a 1:1 powder/creme ratio. does bleach lose its potency after a period of time? why was my hair unchanged? (I have asian hair btw)

How do I go from copper to ash blonde hair?

I've been dying my hair with Ion permanent hair dye in Dark Intense Red Blonde 6IR-6.66 for about six months. I loved the color, but I just started to miss my natural blonde hair after a while. I knew that going from red to blonde can be an extremely hard thing to do, so I did my research and finally built up the nerve to try to do it. I decided to use Color Oops Extra Strength to strip as much of the dye out as I could. It worked wonderfully, but left my hair a very coppery orange color, which I expected. My hair now looks to be around a level 7 or 8 now. I went to Sally's and bought some Ion hair dye in Light Cool Blonde 8V-8.2 after checking with one of the associates there to make sure I was making the right choice. I explained to her that I had stripped the dye out of my hair and she told me that using a hair dye with a violet base should mostly correct the copper tones in my hair. So I went home and did two strand tests. One using a volume 10 developer that I left in for 35 minutes and one using a volume 20 developer that I left in for 45 minutes. My hair was completely unchanged both times. It did not take to the dye at all. Not even a little bit. This really surprised me because my hair is very fine and normally very receptive to dye. So my question is, what the heck do I do now? What is the best and quickest way to get my hair back to ash blonde without going to a salon? Preferably, I'd like to avoid bleaching it because of how damaging that can be and because from what I've read, bleaching leaves hair orange or yellow anyway. However, my hair is really strong and healthy, and even after six months of dying it, is still as soft and healthy looking than before I started dying it, and if bleaching it is my only hope, then I will do it. I just miss my blonde hair and want it back! Thank you to anyone who takes the time to read this and help me out! It is much appreciated!

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