My hair is between a level 7 and 8 naturally, with my previous colour being a very faded demi-permanent 4R that was more around a level 6. When I say warm, I mean that it gets hot.Īnd lastly, it didn’t actually give much lift. Next, the formula dries quite rapidly, which for me was before I even got all of it in my hair.Įverything in the Blond Brilliance line also gets quite warm on your hair, at least in what I’ve used, and it’s a bit… uncomfortable. I had red in previously so this was expected to some degree, but my very ashy roots also came out quite yellow and they definitely should not have with a toner in there. Despite being a violet toner, my hair still came out banana yellow and orange. Third? It doesn’t actually tone that well. Because it’s so thick, it’s also incredibly difficult to efficiently apply to hair (even more so if your hair is very thick as well). Second, the consistency of this is much thicker than any bleach should be it’s very chalky as well and just doesn’t mix well no matter what. Swapped it for a different box and used their developer with it the second time). (Originally, I figured that was rubbish, so I used my Ion brand 30 Volume with it, and the entire mixture was a mess in general. Where to start? For one, you can only use the Blond Brilliance Oil Creme Infusion Developer with this, so forget about using that liter of 30 in your cupboard, and you can only really use the Blond Brilliance developer with other products of the same brand. I got a box of this as a sample from my work and was planning on bleaching my hair anyway, so I figured I had might as well try it out. It’s kind of a weird consistency, very thick when you squeeze it out of the tube, and chalky when it’s mixed, but who cares as long as it works, right? I’ll just have to go back tomorrow and get an all over dye to even it all out again, but I’m still glad I tried it, and will use it again, because rarely does something completely get rid of my brassiness. Other than that, it smells great, especially for a bleach (kind of like berries). And if you’re just doing your roots, make sure not to get any on the already blonde parts. So if you have naturally dark hair, this will definitely work. It turned my brown roots white, and the already blonde parts that I got some on a light blue. Well, I used the matching 35 developer of the same brand along with it, and it DEFINITELY did its job. I figured that this would take care of the red/pumpkin orange tones that come about, but that I’d still need to get out my clairol high lift ultra cool blonde blue-violet to tone it some more. I asked my co-worker whether I should use the ash or violet one, and she suggested ash. I have a lot of trouble with my naturally red tinted hair turning orange or yellow, and having to bleach and dye the crap out of it to make it look somewhat decent (usually can’t get rid of the brassiness completely). I work at Sally’s, and needed to do my roots, so I decided to try this. It definitely worked…almost a little too well.
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