I love to hear it, too, but a caveat… gray in your 30s can be sleek looking, but when perimenopause hits in your 40s, the texture of your hair can completely change. And not in a good way. The gray doesn’t look as cool when your hair is the texture of straw. (And no judgement to women who don’t care.) |
I use the Madison Reed powder compact and think it works welll. I have light brown hair and it makes the grey look more like just highlights. It stays in and doesn’t run although I guess I’ve never stood in pouring rain with it. |
| I use Clairol natural instincts in a shade a little lighter than my actual color. Pretty happy with it though may not work as well when I have more grey. |
|
I’ve just gone gray - white, really. I can’t stomach salon costs and I have very fast growing thick hair. Even at home just totally annoyed me. It absolutely makes me look a lot older, but I’ve decided I care less about looking older than I do about the hassle and fuss of dying my hair.
I wandered into a gift shop attached to a salon in Potomac the other day and looked up to find myself in line with the salon’s customers. They were all my age with tight faces, long smooth dark hair, and the same black puffer jacket. They were also all 6 inches shorter and much skinnier than me. I felt like a penguin in a crowd of sparrows. It was very weird! |
|
$340 including tip every 6 weeks for highlights, lowlights and cut.
Non-negotiable for me. |
DP. highlights or lightened hair looks much more like straw eventually than grey does. especially if you swim a lot. |
Doesn’t your whole head end up highlighted if you get them every 6 weeks? |
Hi. Op here. I wish I could do this, but I am post menopausal and my hair is dry and flyaway and not the same hair as I had in my youth. But it’s wonderful if this works for you. |
|
Love the suggestions including non ammonia Clairol treatments and powder touch ups, which I might have too much grey for.
Is Madison Reed an over the counter |
I used to do foils and it’s doable but I find I have more control if I paint them on with very thin paint brush. Recently I tried this and it worked like a charm (don’t laugh too hard): https://www.target.com/p/between-teeth-interdental-brushes-mint-trial-size-up-38-up-8482/-/A-88946835 |
That’s interesting. I have darker hair and my grays are white/silver. I always thought people with dark gray hair had some type of black or darker brown hair naturally |
| I actually went to a different person and salon for color and cut. I just couldn’t find one person who could do them both well (curly hair). My color was $120 every 6 weeks (single color glaze just to blend grays, not full coverage). Haircut is about $100 every 4-5 months. But I stopped coloring my hair about couple yrs ago…it just wasn’t worth my time. |
|
I have medium blonde hair and got full highlights most of my life for about $275.
I’d go 2-3 times a year. Then I got tired of going a couple years ago around age 50 so it’s natural now. About 10% grey/white. I’m calling that my highlights. |
| Zero. I'm letting the gray come in. |
| I have very dark brown hair and guess that I'm ~15-20% gray at this point. I color my hair every 6 weeks or so w/ Wella Color Charm demi-permanent. Costs ~$10-12 per tube plus whatever pennies for the developer (it a giant bottle for like $10 and lasts for many coloring sessions). I can't be arsed to get to the salon for multi-hour coloring sessions when it is so easy and cheap to do at home. |