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Hi everyone
it's April with Hair 101 i'm going to show you another color technique that I do
It's called a paint between it's really good to
do on anyone this is a good way to get
all of the hair colored maybe they want to have their browns a little more rich
than their natural hair color and then still have some highlights
it's pretty much doing an all over hair color with two colors
so there are no hairs that are left out that are
natural. so it's a real good option for someone going grey because it covers all of
the grey hair with either the light or the dark color
and it's really fun so i'm going to show you how to do that
i'm going to ask her real quick from what we did last time
if she wants to change anything so you want to do a little bit more blond??
this time?? Yeah probably like
2/3rds blond and 1/3rd brown okay that sounds good
I can't remember
we'll lighten this up a little bit more and for her color
I usually do like a 6N
for her brown and then the light
i'm going to use the Framesi bleach cream
when you mix the framesi you are doing
you're doing 20 grams of the color
which is about 4 strips on the bowl to every
40 ml of developer
so that's the ration to mix it and if you buy this color it tells you
on the little paper in the package how to mix it up
i'm using the 6NN
they are the double pigments in the Redkin line
the color fusion they're really good for greys
it colors really well on grey hair
but it gives a really pretty color and i'm out of my regular
level 6 and this is really good too so it works
I use what I have
so I have a fourth of a tube of that and i'm using
using 10 developer because she doesn't really have
a lot of greys if she did have a lot of greys I would use 20
so the very first time you do this technique
if they have *** hair and you were doing this technique you would be pulling
the blondes out and sticking the lightener on the entire section of that blond
so that would be really easy to
keep all of the ends protected from the paint between that you are going to do
because her hair has already been lightened when I take these blond
pieces out you have to make sure
that all of the ends stay inside of the foil
so in order to keep all these ends safe from the other color I take
a bunch of conditioner and put it in a bowl and use it like color and i'm going to paint
those onto her blond ends so it's going to be giving her ends a deep condition
also while we're putting the color in
you do have to make sure not to get the conditioner on the bleach
because that won't be good I just fold the foil down
and then I stick it in then I always put the lightener on
from the regrowth from the scalp
all the way until it hits that line of regrowth
or the color change line then with the conditioner you can
do just the ends then that way when you fold it up
you can fold this line to that middle section
that's dry and keep the bleach and the conditioner seperate
from each other then you don't have to worry about
the paint between color getting on those ends and making them dark
that's the little trick that will help
that's the little trick that will help you out with this color technique
the paint between so that's what i'm going to do on these two back sections
all the way up
and then I'll check back with you for the top. we're going to leave out all of the browns
and on the blonds you
retouch the regrowth area then put the conditioner
on the ends to keep it
tight in that foil because on a normal
weave you'd be leaving those ends like a tail out the side
and that will not work for a paint between so make sure
you are getting those in with either conditioner or if you can wind the hair up
and tuck it in there I like using the conditioner for the whole
deep conditioning idea thats kinda fun but sometimes if I'm
really really trying to go fast i'll wind the hair up and stick it in the foil
and make sure that none of the ends are poking out but that does take a little bit more practice
this is definitely easier for beginners
so definitely through the top i'm really taking extra special care to make
sure that I'm taking some of those
blond pieces out the back of it seemed really blond anyway
it's more on the top that we had some of the extra dark in there
so I'm going to do the lightener on the light part and the conditioner on the blond
and then sandwich this foil whenever I do the two together
like that I sandwich it to make sure that those two
chemicals or whatever are not bleeding together
okay so I need to mix up some more of the lightener and i'm already probably
more than halfway done like 2/3rds done
since I want it to go a little bit faster when I mix it up this time
I'm going to use thirty volume bleach so it can catch up to
the 20 volume bleach that we used in the back
and that way everything will process faster and
yeah that's my little tip for the day If you have to mix up more bleach
you can mix it up a little stronger than the last batch if you're almost done
so these brown pieces up here
i'm going to cut them in half
a little bit more blonde and
so I figure if I cut them in half then she'll be more blond
alright
I always switch over to the front right here because
I like to get really close to the the face
and I take these sections really small because there is usually little
widow's peak and if you try to stretch it in there too much
then It will not have color on the roots
and not look good since it's right by the face
take that extra tiny little piece and make it look right
a widow's peak is when the hair comes down to a point right here
not everyone has it
but usually people have a little bit like a round shape right there
if they don't have a widows peak I always take really
small sections right here
by the face just make sure I can get close to those roots alright so now
I'm taking.... and you know what
I was wrong I mean... it's hard to admit that I was wrong
but it's better to mix up the brown after you've put all the blonds in because
then the color is not
sitting there oxidizing i'm going to put a little bit more in here
now would be the time to be mixing up your brown color
pretend like I just barely mixed this up
it will still work just fine but fresh color does
work really great a little bit better than color that's been sitting here for 30 minutes
then you're going to put gloves on for the next part
so put your gloves on you really should wear gloves when you are
doing color like this it's not good for your skin
it can absorb into your body always wear gloves when you're touching
a chemical onto your skin okay i'm going to start
on the front and you go to that first section that is brown
then you're going to use a clip
I stand all the foils straight up and down then I put the clip through about
six of them
and that holds them up and down then you reach in
and if you have one that's right against the face you can go in and put another
foil in that one so you don't put the color smashed against their forehead
that's not a good idea then you go in here
and if there's any little bleeders you can just dust them with the color
and this takes care of
all of those ends and if the hair is long enough to reach past their face
you need to put that in the foil on the first few that go forward
so it's not hitting their face with the color and you'll go through all the
foils in between hence the name "paint between"
and you're going to paint it in make sure you're getting close to the scalp
because especially if they have grey
they're not gonna wanna have grey roots still when they're done
make sure you're getting this nice and close to the scalp
this is a lot better for the hair than coloring it all dark and bleaching it out every time
you could color all their hair brown and then foil a bunch of highlights
then if you keep doing that then
you're just recoloring and rebleaching their hair so many times that their hair is going to be fried
that's why I like this technique better
the other option would be to foil up everything and that I think is just
waisting foils and taking up too much time so this is faster than that
I am putting it on the entire shaft of hair even if it's already brown
just to refresh the ends because if they've faded out
might as well just put it everywhere
I've gone through all of the foils and done
the paint between on everything and so the last step
especially if you have gray hair this is something you cannot
if you skip this they are going to have these gray stripes
all over their head so you have to take the color and get a good amount in there
and you're going to paint on the edges of everything
in all of the partings and if it gets a little bit on the bleach guess what
that's okay because
it's better than having grey hairs trust me on this one
you're gonna go through and then even along the face right here
you'll paint the color make sure you get all of these little hairs
you can go back through after we're done and wipe it with a little cloth
and make sure but you need to really make sure
that you get every edge here's another parting right in here
you see how it's dry right in here you need to paint
the color in there
okay so now that you've heard my little shpeal. make sure that you do that every where
make sure you don't miss any double check because you don't want to have stripes
if they don't have gray hair and their hair pretty much gonna be the same
color as the color you are doing anyway it's not as big of a deal but still do it
because you don't want to chance having a different color stripe anywhere on the head
alright on this side over here then again along
the face the hairline
sometimes you have to lift the foils up a little bit like this to get in there
you just life them up like that and you can see better
okay
you should have that time and
now it's time to process you can process this room temperature
well you're going to look at the box color
see how long it says usually it says 30-45 minutes
or if you have a faster color you can put a cap on it and
process it under a dryer which I usually do with her but if you're doing
a really heavy gray coverage you'll want to make sure that you process
the full 35 to 40 minutes whatever it says
we're gong to do the shower cap and the reason why you need a shower cap
is because if you put the color underneath the dryer without this on it
it's going to dry out and it won't process
and it will be crusty so make sure you keep it moist tuck in all the loose hairs
then you can process under the dryer
k last step before you process I take a little bit of water on a towel
and I follow around the round of the face
and the ears and I wipe up any little bits of color that might be on their skin
because nobody wants to go home with black
stain on their skin or their ears when they're getting their hair colored
and even along the neckline you can even do it down here
if you see any k looks good make sure you always
check the color before you rinse it I think that's light enough I think that looks good
we're going to go ahead and rinse her out
I didn't use a toner on her because it was just a retouch
her ends are already really pale
light and the roots looked good so she's going to be
how it was i'm going to go ahead and dry it up and do a trim
alright so we are all done with our paint between
and here's the end result we lightened it up a little bit more through the top and
let me show you the back it's a really pretty
blended two color hair color and there are no
grays anywhere even though guess what. she doesn't have any greys anyway
but if she did there still wouldn't be any awesome right?
and you can see in here that we got all the color everywhere and
we're good so try it!
let me know how you guys like it and we'll see you next time