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Dyeing Hair After Bleaching?

June 10, 2015

Recently I had scalp bleached my hair and it is very unhealthy and brittle, and snapping greatly in some areas. I am naturally a brunette. I hate my hair like this and I regret dyeing it blonde.

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How long do I have to wait to dye my hair again? I am not bleaching it. I am just going to put in a semi-brunette colour.

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Gold Post Medal for All Time! 523 Posts
June 11, 20152 found this helpful
Best Answer

My best answer is: if your hair is this badly damaged, it should not be subjected to further chemical treatments. You should live with it or wear a wig until it all grows out.

My second best answer is: Apply a temporary brunette color, such as a weekly rinse. If you choose to go with a semi permanent color, choose one which has no oxidizers, catalysts or boosters of any kind. Above all, and I do mean above all, do a strand test to a small area at the nape of the neck before applying the solution to the entire head.

 
June 13, 20152 found this helpful
Best Answer

There are natural hair dyes you can use that have no harsh chemicals in them. Most of them are vegetable based dyes. Make SURE you do the strand test first! But this is what we used at the hair salon I worked at. Read your labels... they will say "no harsh chemicals", "vegetable based formula".

 
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25 More Questions

Here are the questions asked by community members. Read on to see the answers provided by the ThriftyFun community.

September 27, 2016

What happens if you re-dye your hair (with permanent colour) the day after using a colour remover?


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Bronze Feedback Medal for All Time! 170 Feedbacks
September 28, 20160 found this helpful
Best Answer

You pretty much deplete all the nutrients from your hair. Depending on our natural colour (red and white blonde being the most fragile, brunette being the strongest), your hair may become very fragile and break easily.

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Consider doing a test with a small portion before you do your entire head?

 

Gold Post Medal for All Time! 523 Posts
September 28, 20161 found this helpful
Best Answer

Two or three things could happen. Rather than go into detail about each one, it would be best if you found out for yourself.

If you haven't done this procedure yet but plan to, after the color remover treatment, do a strand test of the color. If you like what you see, you can proceed with the entire head.

If you don't like the results of the strand test, you will then know not to proceed with a full head treatment.

 
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April 8, 2016

I have recently gone to a hair dresser to have my hair dyed a wonderful gray. However, she didn't have my hair to the lightest it needed to be for it to take and hold the gray. So now I have a lot of blonde/yellow showing through the gray after just two washes!

I'm wondering if I could just dye my hair gray over the previous gray to avoid bleaching again for a while, or do I need to just start over and go through the bleaching process again? Please help!

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Gold Post Medal for All Time! 523 Posts
April 9, 20160 found this helpful
Best Answer

High fashion blonds, platinums and silvers, require that the hair be pre bleached to the pale yellow stage. There are two reasons this is necessary. First, the toners which are applied to the bleached hair have a blue, violet or blue/violet base. If not enough yellow is removed in the bleaching process, the residual yellow and the blue/violet of the toner could result in green.

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The second reason is that toners are very delicate colors. If the hair is not bleached to the correct stage of pale yellow, the hair will not have the proper porosity to 'accept' the toner. The toner is deposited only to the outside of the cuticle and will quickly be shampooed away. The toner must penetrate through the hair cuticle to get a lasting color.

Also know that since toners are very delicate, they can be stripped from the hair even if proper penetration is achieved. This would be the result of using a shampoo that is not designed for bleached and toned hair. Also, keep in mind that excessive exposure to sunlight can fade these delicate toners.

Recoloring you hair with a grey color will not solve your problem. It will only temporarily cover the yellow.

The hair must be bleached again to bring it up to the color manufacturer's suggested stage of pale yellow and porosity, and then the 'grey' toner reapplied.

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It seems that your hair was bleached to almost the needed degree of 'lightness'. Your second visit to the salon should take only a portion of the time required on the first visit.

Once you achieve the desired color, be sure to use a shampoo specifically designed for bleached and toned hair. The best colorist in the world cannot guarantee the toner will last til time for a bleach and tone retouch, if you use a shampoo at home that can strip color.

For what it's worth: You should not have to pay for having the bleach and tone corrected, only for the shampoo and set (if in fact you do get a shampoo and set (or blow dry or whatever).

 
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March 1, 2016

I dyed my hair last night and it's come out far too blonde. It is much higher than I thought it would be. I really hate it! What can I do? I was told to wait to go to the salon.


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Gold Post Medal for All Time! 523 Posts
March 2, 20160 found this helpful
Best Answer

Yes. The corrective work should be done by a professional. If you should decide to recolor your hair, yourself, you should choose a color several (at least 2) shades lighter than you want the end result to be.

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Bleached and toned (not 'dyed') hair will 'grab' dark colors and end up much darker than the color shown on the bottle.

 
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December 28, 2019

I got me 4 packs of bleach from Sally's to dye my hair. We put 3 of them in and had no problems, but last night we put the 4 one in, it burned my scalp and left blue/green from the bleach in it and it's not coming out.

What should I do? How long would this take to heal and how long do I wait to put dye in?

Dyeing Hair After Bleaching - green hair after bleaching
 
Dyeing Hair After Bleaching
 
Dyeing Hair After Bleaching
 

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Bronze Post Medal for All Time! 105 Posts
December 28, 20190 found this helpful
Best Answer

You will need to wait until your scalp heals before proceeding on with what you want to do. In the meantime, you should condition your hair and scalp to prepare to dye it again.

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Normally in cases like this you should wait at least 6 to 8 weeks.

 
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March 24, 2018

My hair was bleached once and my hair colour was blue at first, but it slowly turned into grey with green tones about a month ago on Feb 10 2018. That was actually my second time bleaching my hair. The first time was on November 26 2017.

Is it okay for my hair to be bleached for the third time on Sunday March 35 and get a purple colour for the colouring part. (For all the times my hair was bleached, I went to a salon to get it done.) Thank you for your response.

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Gold Post Medal for All Time! 677 Posts
March 24, 20180 found this helpful
Best Answer

Enough time has passed. Deep-condition before you go.

 
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August 8, 2016

I recently dyed and bleached my hair, 6 months ago, to an ombre colour (brown and blonde). If I want to get rid of the blonde at home, should I dye all of my hair brown or should I only dye the previously dyed areas?


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Bronze Post Medal for All Time! 107 Posts
February 28, 20170 found this helpful
Best Answer

IF you can only dye the previously dyed areas, that woudl be ideal so that the whole thing would be evened out in the end. IF you dye all of it together you may get uneven spots.

 
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May 25, 2016

My friend bleached my hair last night and I hate the color. If I wait 2 days do you think it will be safe to dye my hair back to dark brown?


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Gold Post Medal for All Time! 523 Posts
May 26, 20160 found this helpful
Best Answer

If your scalp feels normal and shows no sign of irritation, I think you could safely color your hair within two days. But there are advantages to waiting at least a week.

Bleach raises the cuticle of the hair, making it more porous. In time the cuticle will 'flatten' a slight amount. This slight amount will be beneficial when you recolor your hair. In effect, it will help prevent the hair from grabbing too much color.

Also, the longer you wait, the less skin staining there should be from the color. I suggest waiting a week, and for the two days prior to the treatment, do not wash your hair and do not wash your hairline. A heavy coat of Vaseline applied to the hairline before the color treatment will reduce staining. If you have it on hand, a heavy coat of Chapstick would be even better.

TAKE NOTE

The colors shown on color boxes and color charts for regular permanent color (not toners), show the manufacturers results on virgin (not bleached or permed) hair, with a percentage of grey averaging 35%. Do not expect to get the color on the box when applying the color to bleached hair.

Due to the porosity caused by the bleach, your hair will grab and hold much more color than virgin hair, resulting in a much darker color than that shown on the box. For this reason it is important you chose a brown shade lighter than your original color.

I cannot give you a concrete answer to how light a brown you should choose. That would depend on how light your hair was bleached. To be on the safe side, I would suggest you use a light brown shade in the same family as your natural hair, reddish, neutral or ashy, etc. If it is too light, color can be reapplied, which is much better that stripping color that is too dark.

If your friend had done a strand test, it would have prevented the need for you to recolor your hair. By the same token, if you do a strand test prior to full head application of the color you will be using, you again are in a position to see what the final results will be before full coverage.

Whatever color you choose for 'redyeing' your hair, follow the package instructions for doing a strand test first. You might save yourself a lot of heartache.

 
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January 24, 2019

I bleached my hair about 4 days ago, I didn't have any problems other than it turned orange. So I knew I needed to redo it. Today I bleached it again, but my hair fell out. Not completely (thank God!), but enough to where my hair look thinner than normal. My scalp doesn't burn or anything and the color is just a lighter orange mixed with some blonde strands. I'm wondering how long should I wait before it will be safe to color my hair. I read that I can use an ash blonde color to turn it to a light brown. Will that be okay as well?

Thanks so much for the response!

Answers

January 24, 20192 found this helpful

Hi, I did the same with my hair when I was 16 y/0. It was soooooo orange. This was done on virgin, dark blonde hair.What I did wasnto DYE it back closest to my original color ASAP! It worked, and from there an and now I have so abused my hair, but going back to my closest color, and a great deep conditioning, and shorter cut always does the job.

 
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