HairbyCass
Well-Known Member
So I am doing a client's hair on the 30th June. She has a speciality photoshoot that is a themed pin up style setting. The theme is mermaid/pearl.
This girl is super alternative and is literally a blank canvas for me. She has given me full creative licence with her instructions being not to give her boring or normal hair.
She has purchased adore by creative image semi permanent for me to use over the top of a scalp bleach. She is naturally very fair, maybe a level 7-8 so getting a clean level 10 is not a problem.
I have never used these products or even heard of them before. Can they be intermixed? Like can I use the emerald and mix in indigo to darken? Is there a "clear" to dilute to achieve an ombre/washed out fade? Can you fade/blend from one colour to another.
I've attached a photo of the colours she's bought. She's happy to purchase any others if I feel we need them.
At this stage I am contemplating using one colour as an "all over" with other colours blocked inbetween to give interest, or perhaps blending from one colour at the roots to another on the ends with peakaboos of contrasting colours.
This girl is super alternative and is literally a blank canvas for me. She has given me full creative licence with her instructions being not to give her boring or normal hair.
She has purchased adore by creative image semi permanent for me to use over the top of a scalp bleach. She is naturally very fair, maybe a level 7-8 so getting a clean level 10 is not a problem.
I have never used these products or even heard of them before. Can they be intermixed? Like can I use the emerald and mix in indigo to darken? Is there a "clear" to dilute to achieve an ombre/washed out fade? Can you fade/blend from one colour to another.
I've attached a photo of the colours she's bought. She's happy to purchase any others if I feel we need them.
At this stage I am contemplating using one colour as an "all over" with other colours blocked inbetween to give interest, or perhaps blending from one colour at the roots to another on the ends with peakaboos of contrasting colours.