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Hide Your Grays for Less

Posted 10:00AM 08/23/11 Savings Experiment, Beauty |
How to Hide Your Grays For Less

Hair dyeAging gracefully is a thing of the past -- and, for many Americans, so are gray hairs. Roughly 75% of U.S. women color their hair, and trips to the salon don't come cheap.

If you're considering dropping your colorist and trying your hand at coloring at home, here are some dos and don'ts to help you stretch your buck while looking good.

Salon vs. DIY

The average cost of a professional single-process hair-color treatment is about $62. Considering that professionally dyed hair needs to be touched up every six weeks, you can rack up some $500 in salon bills each year.

Some people try to save money with at-home color kits, which can cost anywhere from $3.92 to $9.94 at Walmart, depending on the brand. With each home coloring lasting about eight weeks, the annual expense comes to around $50 -- significantly less than the salon alternative. Unfortunately, these savings can come at a price.

With do-it-yourself hair-color kits, you run the risk of damaging your hair or ending up with the wrong color. "At home, customers apply color from roots to end, but I only do what's needed, and I don't overlap color," says Kacey Welch, colorist at Neil George Salon in Beverly Hills. "A client can damage their hair long term, and corrective color is more expensive."

Fxing a bad dye job with a professional corrective color treatment usually costs more than the original single-process color. Welch also points out that you can't always get the perfect color from a box. "I don't pick one color," she says. "I mix multiple colors to make the perfect shade." Jack Miroslaw, owner of Eruan Salon in Manhattan, agrees. "If you want to have good looking hair, you've got to spend the money," he says.

Buy Yourself More Time

So the pros -- unsurprisingly -- advise against at-home color, but Mark Mileti, executive colorist at Minardi Salon in Manhattan, helps his clients stretch the time between their visits by using those kits. "I tell them what to do, on the condition that they'll come back to me," Mileti says.

He tells his clients to mix only one-tenth of the dye in an at-home kit and use a Q-tip or toothbrush to apply the color to their roots and part lines. With careful application, these touch-ups can stretch your dye job by one or two weeks, Mileti says.If you decide to take this route, make sure to use a ammonia-free dye like Clairol Natural Instincts.

Good Housekeeping and Consumer Reports both named Clairol a top at-home hair-dye brand. You can get the dye at Walmart for $6 to $10 per box. Factoring in the costs of combining salon visits and touch-up kits, you'd spend approximately $420 per year, knocking off the cost of about one salon trip from your yearly expenses. Keep in mind that you'll probably have to use some of that money toward replacing stained towels and cleaning up the mess after your touch-ups.

All things considered, there's no real shortcut to great hair color. But with caution and care, you can buy yourself some extra time between salon visits.

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Kulpsville Manor

I'm 43 and am letting my grays show. Do the math and see - regardless of home kits or professional stylists - how much you've been spending on your hair. It's astronomical! I wasn't fooling anyone with my reddish brown hair, which I had for years. So, I spent some $$ and got white highlights to camouflage the "skunk line" and I'm way happier. Let the real you shine through!

August 27 2012 at 1:08 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
jillsturman

I was a hairstylist for 17 years and i always used lower volume peroxide 5 to 10 Volume to deposit color to the hair on my clients and it wouldn't lift the natural color hair, so when it fades it fades back to the natural color, if you have grey just add a little gold hair color to your formula to cover the grey, i always recommened using a professional for colored treated hair shampoo and conditioner so the color wouldn't fade as fast, i am doing my own color at home now and i use a lower volume peroxide and my colors last about 8 weeks, you can't help the regrowth, but if it fades to natural color it isn't as obvious, i mix 2 colors, and use the professional cream color over the liquid, i always apply on clean and dampen the hair slightly so it gos on easier and more even.

May 22 2012 at 4:16 PM Report abuse -1 rate up rate down Reply
tamfish1215

All dye jobs look the same when your roots start to show

May 22 2012 at 1:50 PM Report abuse -1 rate up rate down Reply
Barb

I can honestly say that I've been doing my own coloring at home and get a lot of compliments-I've been asked where I get my coloring done. Luckily, I have shiney hair and never use a shampoo wuth sulfate in the ingredience. Paid over 90.00 for a complete do over and it wasn't any better than what I did at home. Use a white towel and just bleach it. Will do the job!!

May 03 2012 at 10:16 PM Report abuse +2 rate up rate down Reply
ekglester

Buy the professional Clairol color and developer at
Sally's. Inexpensive and you can control how much you use, etc.

May 03 2012 at 7:27 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
angelabrooks4

First of all, I do both the salon and the at home. I do the salon when I want the highlights and I am just too lazy to both with it myself :) I have a lot of hair and it takes a while. My color at the salon is 555. I know it, I remember it and I live it :) as for the at home, I use a color mousse--they are so easy and do an excellent job. Even my colorist thinks it looks fantastic and that no one could tell the difference, so :P!
I think a lot time the mistake most people make with at home coloring is that they rush through it and their hair does not get completely saturated with the color and it doesn't matter if it either done by a colorist or at home, if you don't take proper care of your hair, such as using very warm to hot water to rinse with or use a sulfate shampoo (which is just bad for you anyway), the color is going to fade and your hair will look dull

May 03 2012 at 2:09 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Caroline

Lordy! You get what you pay for.... Home dye jobs look like HOME DYE JOBS! Suck it up, pay a pro,(highlights work great since they aren't all one color and don't show growth as quickly) or go natural.....but PLEASE dont do it yourself.... regardless of how YOU think it looks... WE can tell(and do!).... and before you say it I'm NOT a hairdresser!

May 03 2012 at 1:22 PM Report abuse -2 rate up rate down Reply
3 replies to Caroline's comment
irinalaw

I have used at home color and would only recommend to people who know the exact shade of the color that their regular salonist uses. I found the coloring 'mousse' products better because there is no mess and no odor.

May 03 2012 at 12:28 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
ohringen

Isha someone should sue you for giving such bad advice. People like you make me sick! Hair stylists and colorists all over America do not appreciate your stupid advice! Women should not buy or use color and apply to roots between salon color. A stylist or colorist most likely mixes two or more colors together to get a good blend of color or shade, and when you tell women to monkey around with cheap over the counter colors and mess with their roots how do you expect your colorist to cover up those mistakes? You cannot color correct over color. Women that color their hair at home always look like they do okay! You get what you pay for. There is more to coloring hair besides dumping hair color on your entire head every few weeks, lol. Get real. and stop giving stupid advice...

May 03 2012 at 9:20 AM Report abuse -5 rate up rate down Reply
Linda

I agree with alias20082009 the products don't work as well as they used to ..and I think it is because they have taken out all that cancer causing stuff. ( a good thing!) .BUT if you go to sally's and buy your own peroxide 30% and mix it with the boxed hair color you get a longer lasting color...AFTER YOU COLOE you should NEVER use a shampoo with any sodium chloride in it..that strips the new color off the hair strand.

May 03 2012 at 9:03 AM Report abuse +2 rate up rate down Reply

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