Lack of consistency and taking too many short cuts causes an inconsistent hair color. I feel customer cards are very important for recording formulas and cheat notes. Make sure that when your hairdresser formulates a color that it is immediately written down. Design the color to fit the hairstyle. Ask your stylist if he or she has changed their color inventory to a different brand. A good stylist will ask if there will be any changes to the color service. When changing your style, your color design has to change but not your color or highlights. I prefer to suggest a winter, spring, summer or fall color to my clients. Porosity is always a key factor in hair color. The way the client is taking care of the color is also very important. Using the right treatments is a must. Styling lotions are very important when you are blow drying. Remember in hair color the client must protect the hair from the sun and heat of the blow dryer. This and not skipping your regular appointments will vastly improve the length of the hair color. Permanent hair color is permanent, not the tone of the hair color. When a customer comes to me for hair color correction, there must be a follow-up appointment. This is basically to see the condition of the hair and the fade hair color or tonal value. Corrective Hair color is a step-by-step approach to a final goal. There are no promises, only a good plan from the stylist and client.
Tag: client
Which Shade Should I Get?
Which Shade Should I Get? There are dozens of hues of blonde hair highlights available. The key to choosing the best shade isn’t just picking a pretty color: it needs to coordinate with your hair, skin, and eye color for a blended, natural look; ideally, more than one highlight shade should be used. Individuals who were born with blonde hair that darkened as they aged (which is natural) can look at old photographs their previous shades of blonde are superb choices for highlights. Individuals who have adopted blonde locks, however, need to take greater care in choosing the best highlight color.
For Your Eye Color. If you have chosen your blonde hair highlight color based on your hair color and skin tone, it will likely already match your eye color as well. As a double-check, note that individuals with very light eyes (blue or green) tend to have cool skin tones and should opt for paler highlight colors, while individuals with dark eyes can often choose richer shades.
For Your Skin Color. Because highlights often frame the face, skin color is the most important factor when choosing an accent shade. The wrong highlight color can make your complexion appear too flushed, too pale, or just discolored. For cool skin tones… Individuals with cool skin tones are frequently pale and do not tan easily. Their skin may have blue or gray undertones that are best highlighted and soothed by ash, beige, wheat, taupe, or other subtle highlights. For ruddy skin tones… Ruddy skin tones tend to have strong red undertones and blush easily. Individuals with ruddy tones should avoid red-based highlights that can accentuate their skin, but beige, gold, and honey brown shades are excellent options. All models on this page where corrective hair color client’s. The brand of hair color used was Goldwell, various levels of reconditioning were implemented to achieve an exact hair color for these client’s. All the corrective color service’s where not completed in one salon visit. And normally in the field of corrective hair color numerous salon visits are needed
Joseph Kellner
HairStylist/Colorist/MUA
407- 421- 5857
Appointments can be made either by phone or by email. Please enjoy my website and let me know how you like it! We use Goldwell Haircolor, Scruples Haircolor and Framesi Haircolor for all salon services.



You must be logged in to post a comment.