Monday, October 3, 2011
Hair: Understanding Hair Colour Level and Tone
I coloured my own hair last week.
Being a hairdresser, I'm lucky I know what I'm doing.
It got me thinking...How do you choose colour for your own hair?
Do you stick to something similar to your own colour or go for something very different?
How do you choose it? Did it turn out how you expected?
Do you colour it yourself or go to a Hairdresser and ask for advice?
I found this fabulous article on About.com
It explains all about Colour Levels and Tones perfectly.
I thought I'd share it with you.
Have you ever heard your hair dresser talking about your hair color and wondered
what planet she was living on? Hair color can be confusing. It's typically a series of
numbers and letters that describe your hair's color. Here are the very basics on hair color,
what your hair dresser knows, and how you can be more informed when speaking to your
stylist or choosing your next color.
First let's define hair color. Hair color is the combined level and tone of a person's hair.
You may also apply the chemical "hair color" to your hair to change you're hair's color.
In the beauty industry, we never refer to hair color as "hair dye".
As one of my beauty school instructors once said, "You dye an Easter egg,
you don't dye your hair."
Hair Color Level
Hair color stars off by identifying the "level" or darkness of the hair.
Whether you're talking about your natural color or choosing a new color, the first step
is to understand and choose how dark the hair is. Standard hair color levels are defined
on a scale of 1 to 10 with level 1 being the darkest, blackest color and level 10 being
a very light blond color. Here are the 10 standard hair color levels:
Level 1: Black
Level 2: Darkest (almost black) Brown
Level 3: Very Dark Brown
Level 4: Dark Brown
Level 5: Brown
Level 6: Light Brown
Level 7: Dark Blond
Level 8: Medium Blond
Level 9: Blond
Level 10: Light Blond
The lightest platinum blonde colours are often referred to as level 11, 12, or even 13.
Hair Color Tone
After establishing the level of one's natural or desired hair color, next the tone of hair color
is defined. Hair color tones can be put into three standard categories: warm, cool, or neutral.
When hair stylists discuss color, or if you are choosing a color from a swatch book, the
tones are often indicated with a letter. Here are standard examples of color tones:
N: Neutral. Neither warm, nor cool.
Cool Tones
A: Ash
B: Beige
B: Blue
G: Green V: Violet
Warm Tones
C: Copper
G: Gold
O: Orange
R: Red
W: Warm
RB: Brown/Red
RO: Red/Orange
Tones are often be combined in hair color formulas to create the perfect shade.
For example, an auburn color is achieved by combining neutral or warm tones with red tones.
Red hair color can be made cool by adding violet tones to the color formula.
Sometimes hair colorists achieve the right color combination by mixing different color tones together,
but the hair color companies typically have pre-created colors that feature mixed tones, as well.
Combining Level and Tone
When defining a hair color, the level and tone are combined into a letter/number combination. For example: a warm brown color would be defined as a "5W". The number indicates the hair color level (brown), and the letter indicates that the tone is warm. Here are a few other examples of hair color defined by the level and tone:
8A: Medium Ash Blond
4RV: Dark Red/Violet
6C: Light Copper Brown
5N: Neutral Brown
9W: Light Warm Blond
Determining a hair color level is pretty simple once you get the hang of it. Your opinion may be a level off from the next person's opinion, but generally speaking, the level is pretty obvious. However, hair color tone is not as easily defined by the eye. What one person my see as "red" the next person may describe as "copper". This is where pictures and swatches come in very handy to be sure that everyone is speaking the same language.
Make it a little clearer?
Next time you're going to purchase a box at the supermarket or when you
visit your hairdresser next time around, you'll know what the numbers and
letters are for on the box or what your Hairdresser is talking about!
Chat soon,
Labels:
Hair,
hair colour,
hair colour level,
hair colour tone
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