This thread has been a great read!
i think classix should be doing online courses for color theory :lol: i know i would pay for his knowledge , lol
Yes it is for informative! I just can't get why though wella says its the natural underlying pigments. Unless they manufacture there colours different to compensate for this?
I've asked them twice and its still the same answer!! Also college who uses wella said the same has wella!!
I think that's why this lead me to the confusion !!!!!
Yes it is for informative! I just can't get why though wella says its the natural underlying pigments. Unless they manufacture there colours different to compensate for this?
I've asked them twice and its still the same answer!! Also college who uses wella said the same has wella!!
I think that's why this lead me to the confusion !!!!!
Snaz, I've ordered a book it's the science about colouring so hopefully i will understand more after that, i will let you know what it says.But i'm gonna be looking at the target base underlying pigment. Although it does still worry me abit regarding the Wella reply.xx
Interesting to know what it says!! I'm going a a course with wella for blondes but it's not 9th July, I'll see what they say! I'll keep you posted!!
One question if you go with the target shade underlying pigments, what if the target shade depth has not been achieve how is it suppose to counteract then??
Yes they sound right. Only difference with wella is that peroxide give different lifts
Pastel for toning or light bleach.
6% 1 shade lift or darker same depth/ for grey coverage
9% 2 levels of lift
12% 3 levels of lift or with high lift 4-5 levels.
right...this is still on my mind lol
did we decide that colour graphics/spectrum applied to the same rules or not.
its just that when using spectrum, i seem to only get yellow when using green on 6 and below.
with blue i dont get a very obvious lift on 7 and 8, whereas using violet on a 7 i get a lovely creamy blonde!
can't get my head around this!:grr:
I'm gonna take it that it's target shade underlying pigment with 1-10 tints and high lift .So from your findings and from mine it seems to be the case.xx
say someone has chestnut brown hair naturally, meaning they have level 5 depth and red undertones. This should come into consideration when choosing a colour to tint? or am i confusing things even more. Is that not why some of the lighter shades (in tints) have ash (green) in them. to neutralise the red as it lightens? that's my thinking anyway probably haven't explained that right lol
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