One of the things that I do to stay up to date on the latest hair trends is to read and look through as many magazines as possible, may it be at the salon or on the computer.
I found this article online at the MORE.com website and thought it was perfect and I wanted to share it with you all. I hear from women in their 40’s+ all the time who say they want a younger stylish look, but they don’t want to look like their trying to be 20 again.
HERES SOME HELPFUL INFORMATION!
By the MORE Beauty Editors; www.more.com
The hair color shades that worked in your 20s and 30s may be aging you now. Here’s your new playbook: expert strategies to get you the best hair color of your life.
Blond Hair
Bangs, layers, and highlights are your best friends. Tousled pieces hide re-growth, so you won't need touch-ups every 10 minutes. "A choppy cut with long bangs and bold, sunny streaks is an immediate de-ager," says colorist Brad Johns, of the Elizabeth Arden Salon, in New York City.
TLC is key. Heat styling and chemical processing make hair porous and prone to breakage. Healing masks and other hair-repair products are an absolute must. "Spend on hair treatments as you would on wrinkle creams," Johns says.
If you're thinking red, go blond. "Red hair, unless it's natural, is tough on mature skin tones," Johns notes. "It will expose and exaggerate blotchiness, brown spots, or sallow undertones. But a honey blond with golden tones works every time."
Don't go to extremes. "African-American women should avoid going blond or red unless their hair is left natural and cropped very short," says Rita Hazan of the Rita Hazan Salon, in New York City. "Rich chestnuts and spice colors add warmth to dark skin tones. You can also benefit from a few well-chosen highlights."
Go semipermanent. A semipermanent tint is "practically foolproof, since it won't lighten your hair color, just enhance it and cover gray," Hazan says. "Try going one shade lighter than you think you need. Most women choose a shade that's too dark for them."
Deep condition daily. "Skip right past anything labeled 'lite,' " Hazan says. "You want a heavy emollient conditioner packed with shea butter, plus hot oil treatments twice a week."
Attitude makes it work. Gray hair requires packaging, or your look can slip from great to granny. Haircut, makeup, and clothes need to be in sync and of-the-minute. "Stay in shape and maintain a lively body language -- think of Meryl Streep's stride and energy in Prada," says Constance Hartnett, of the Frederic Fekkai Salon, in New York City.
Your best gray may not be your natural gray. "Adding cool, ashy highlights can improve the color and is one of the best-kept secrets of stylish gray-haired women," Hartnett says.
Stay smooth. Straighter hair reflects light, deemphasizing lines and creases in your face. A silicone serum can help you shine. So can a deep-moisturizing shampoo and a ceramic-coated flatiron designed to dry wet hair.
Your twenty-something shade won't work when you're 50. Extremely dark hair can look hard and fake next to mature skin. Downshifting from espresso brown to a softer shade, like maple or chestnut, can erase years.
Your makeup tells you if your shade is right. "If you've gone too dark, you'll be piling on concealer to erase shadows and circles exaggerated by that inky frame of hair," says colorist Sharon Dorram-Krause of the John Frieda Salon, in New York City. "If your makeup seems to be working, you've got the right balance."
It's okay to go brown-gray. A lot of women are choosing semipermanent color, which covers some gray but not all. Although it washes out in about six weeks, it looks more natural and dimensional than a flat, permanent color
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