Hair Care
8 Products to Get Salon-Worthy Hair Color at HomeItching to switch up your hair color? These kits will help you get the new look you crave without spending tons of money at the salon |
Thanks to Pinterest, choosing a new hair color is easy. The hard part? Executing of-the-moment sombré, babylights or one-dimensional color in the confines of your bathroom.
That's where these at-home hair color kits come in. Thanks to innovations in application and formula, they make it oh-so-easy to get gorgeous, flawless results -- as long as you play by the rules.
"Always follow the directions from the manufacturer," says Kari Hill, the L'Oréal Paris celebrity colorist behind Anna Faris' gorgeous blonde hair. "The side of the box does not lie." Don't go rogue and think you know better than the instructions -- that may work when you're baking cookies, but it's not a risk you want to take with your hair.
Once you commit, Hill recommends having the following tools on hand: extra pairs of gloves, a wide-tooth comb, a fine-tooth rattail comb, section clips, clear lip-balm to use as a barrier around your hairline, a hand-mirror, a t-shirt and towels that you don't mind getting dye on, small pieces of cotton to isolate highlights around your face (if you're a seasoned at-home hair color pro), and, most importantly, a timer. All set? Then you're ready to try these eight innovative at-home hair color kits.
Image via Imaxtree
SEE NEXT PAGE: Best for: Karlie Kloss-esque Babylights
That's where these at-home hair color kits come in. Thanks to innovations in application and formula, they make it oh-so-easy to get gorgeous, flawless results -- as long as you play by the rules.
"Always follow the directions from the manufacturer," says Kari Hill, the L'Oréal Paris celebrity colorist behind Anna Faris' gorgeous blonde hair. "The side of the box does not lie." Don't go rogue and think you know better than the instructions -- that may work when you're baking cookies, but it's not a risk you want to take with your hair.
Once you commit, Hill recommends having the following tools on hand: extra pairs of gloves, a wide-tooth comb, a fine-tooth rattail comb, section clips, clear lip-balm to use as a barrier around your hairline, a hand-mirror, a t-shirt and towels that you don't mind getting dye on, small pieces of cotton to isolate highlights around your face (if you're a seasoned at-home hair color pro), and, most importantly, a timer. All set? Then you're ready to try these eight innovative at-home hair color kits.
Image via Imaxtree
SEE NEXT PAGE: Best for: Karlie Kloss-esque Babylights