How To Do Low Lights On Blonde Hair At Home
With the lowlight technique you are replacing the pigment back into the air with foils or freehand techniques.
How to do low lights on blonde hair at home. Lowlights can be used when you have overprocessed your hair with bleach and they add a rich texture and color to contrast and blend with the blonde color associated with bleaching. To get the lighter tone is often possible only after bleaching. Apply the lowlights in sections of any size you choose.
A balance of highlights and lowlights will give you a more natural-looking blonde. Using lowlights in a color one to three shades darker will allow you to add depth and dimension to your hair. Do not apply lowlight formula to natural regrowth.
Lowlights are the secret sauce to blending in our grays. You can also consider opting for babylights. Take the first section of hair in one hand and using the paint brush apply the coloring mix evenly from the roots to the tips of your hair.
Section out the highlighted hair in the nape clipping the hair above the nape out of the way. Use your Tint Brush to weave through your row of Hair creating a few weaves no thicker than 12cm. But since then lowlights have been largely under utilized.
Create another row underneath. Ask your colorist to add in highlights and lowlights for gray hair ranging from pearl to medium blonde. Guide the tip of your Tint Brush through the Hair creating a row of Hair around 15cm thick placing it over your head as this Hair will not be used.
Painting lowlights over bleached hair. When highlighting you lift the pigment out of the hair with weaves or slices isolated in foils or free hand techniques such as balayage. Hold the weaved pieces of Hair tight and let the rest fall away.