how bleach your hair at homehello, friends! are you a scene kid™ that wants to dye your hair bubblegum pink? perhaps a punk who wants a vibrant, cherry red? billie eilish fan going for slime, toxic green? or maybe you're into a marilyn-monroe-had-a-love-child-with-barbie platinum blonde look? to achieve vibrant colors, one must first have a light canvas - or perhaps that light canvas is the goal in itself here be a tutorial on how to bleach your hair, at home, and hopefully not end up in a brad mondo fail video uwu part 00: thoughts & suppliesthings to consider before even beginning:
for supplies, i'll be making a list of my recommended brands after the tutorial, but this is a general overview of what you absolutely need. i have broken it up into "you literally can't lighten your hair without these," and "these aren't technically required, but it's wise to get these, like, seriously dude." i'll also be writing the tutorial under the assumption you'll be using the same supplies, and the what's and why's for my recommendations will be addressed in the tutorial itself :,) i'd recommend getting double of what you think you need, to make sure you have enough. larger quantities are usually cheaper as well. worst comes to worst, if you have extra (unused, bc you didn't need to bust into it) product, you can just return it, or use it when you do a root touch up necessary supplies:
highly recommended supplies:
ready to start? alrighty >:3 part 01: preparestep 01: don't wash your hair for a week. yes, seriously. i know, i know, [valley girl voice] "gross" or w/e. don't worry: you can bathe, just don't wash your hair lol. you're temporarily going no 'poo. if you must wash, then only wash the mid-shaft to the ends, and leave your scalp alone. i recommend just wearing a shower cap tho. before bleaching, you want as much of a buildup of natural oils as possible to protect your scalp from irritation and chemical burns. bleach on a freshly washed scalp = suffering step 02: go into a room that you can keep well ventilated. a bathroom that has a fan to turn on, where you can open a window, is ideal. this will help reduce fumes from chemicals step 03: cover the area you're in with your cheap shower curtain, table cloth, and/or towels. this will protect your counters from getting bleached and damaged :,) step 04: the day of, slather your forehead, temples, neck, and anywhere else your hair touches with coconut oil. legit you want a thick coat of the stuff. then go over that with vaseline. this will help protect your skin from irritation and chemical burns you might see other tutorials saying to put coconut oil in the hair and leave it overnight, and sure, if you want to, go for it. it won't hurt i don't personally do this because it's just something for the bleach to have to eat through, but the bleach will eat through it, so at best it doesn't really help the hair, and at worst makes the bleach develop slower. (this is input from brad mondo coupled with my personal experience. you don't always gotta take the word of professionals as the end-all-be-all gospel of god, but i mean... it doesn't hurt to listen to professionals lol, and in this case all i can say is i personally find he has a point lol) step 05: separate your hair into quadrants. down the middle of the back of your head, then across the middle horizontally. using where your ears attach to your head, giving or taking an inch or so, is a good guideline for where this part should be. use the clips to clip up your your hair to keep these quadrants separated, with the top parts up so no hairs are falling down. to help, a lot of ppl use the handle of a tint brush to make the divide lines and separate things out evenly pictured: an example of how separated hair quadrants look step 05: put on your gloves and eyewear. DO NOT SKIP GLOVES, bleach can and will burn your skin with prolonged contact. eyewear isn't as much of a necessity, but i also don't think you can be too careful :,) part 02: the actual bleaching processstep 01: mix your lightener and highest volume developer together in a plastic or ceramic bowl, with a plastic fork. (DO NOT USE METAL, EVER. metal can be corroded by the bleach, and can give off toxic fumes. it's dangerous to use metal. i personally have a ceramic bowl, and i use a plastic fork. the fork is kind of like a whisk and i find things get mixed better, but a plastic spoon is also viable) the typical ratio is 2 parts developer to 1 part bleach (2:1), but depending on the brand of bleach/developer you're using, that could vary. read the instructions of the products you're using to make sure. use the plastic measuring spoons to accurately measure out your products you want your mix to have a thick, creamy consistency. scoop some on your mixing utensil, and hold it upside down like an employee at dairy queen showing how thick a blizzard is. is the mix immediately dribbling off, super thin and runny? or is it staying put like a karen who's demanding to speak to a manager, very slowly dripping like thicc oatmeal? you want the thicc stuff. a thicker mixture will not dry out as easily. the mix can only lighten while wet, so you want something that will stay wet on the hair, and not drip down as much to irritate your skin step 02: if you're using a bond sustainer like olaplex, and/or a scalp protector, this is the step you also mix those in to the bleach mixture. always read the instructions on how to properly use these products as well, but i can say that i can't imagine this won't be the step to use them in :,) step 03: take down one of your bottom sections of hair, and separate that into smaller sections, 1-2 inches wide. it's time to get painting >:3 step 04: this can be tricky since you should start from the back, and the bottom first. you're gonna have to juggle with holding a mirror up to see the back of your head, and painting the bleach on with the tint brush lay your hair over some tinfoil, start an inch from your scalp, and paint down one of the smaller sections. you want to make sure, again, that the bleach is on there thick. if the bleach already looks white bc the product is so thick, but you can just barely see the hair underneath, that's a good sign i personally like to take the hair between my fingers, and "slide" my fingers down the shaft, to feel if it's wet and saturated. once it's saturated enough, wrap the tinfoil it around. this will keep this section separate so you don't get more product on it, and the heat will help it process. rinse and repeat with all the mini sections you made note: bleach does not lather. it will feel saturated and kinda goopy, but not foamy DO NOT DO YOUR ROOTS YET pictured: example of using foil (please disregard the time on the image lol) pictured: example of leaving an inch from your scalp step 05: take the next bottom quadrant down from it's clip, and repeat step 04 step 06: same as 05 lol :,) but this time you're going to want to make sure you're still working from the bottom layers to the top step 07: when you finally get to the very, very top layer of hair, you're going to make slightly different subsections, and instead work from outwards (near your ears) inwards (near your middle part.) this way you're not starting at the part, and having to flip your wet hair over to get to the hair underneath. i hope that description makes sense ;w; step 08: once the majority of your hair is saturated, leave it for 15 to 20 minutes. keep checking a top section every few minutes to see how it's lightening. once it looks yellow or light orange, then you're ready to get those roots, babey! step 09: again start from the bottom, and clip up your foiled hair if it's in the way, if you really have to. (but since it's all separated, it shouldn't be as much of a problem as when the hair was still dry lol.) you should have the little sections still, so it shouldn't be difficult to just... go back in over the roots? :,) make sure those puppies are also mega saturated, on all sides, do your best to avoid getting bleach in contact with your scalp, so it doesn't get irritated. you can spritz some water from a spray bottle onto your roots to make sure they stay moist, and you can put all of the foils inside and cover your head with a shower cap. this will make a warm, moist environment bweach wike warm moist enviwonment to pwocess uwu step 10: now that all of your hair is covered, it's a waiting game. you can leave bleach on up to an hour, but following this tutorial you already had it in the majority of your hair for 20 minutes, so i don't advise going past 40 minutes keep checking what's in the foil, and your roots. if things are looking dry, spritz some water from a spray bottle you should notice that the hair in the foils is the same shade as the hair at the roots. the reason you do the majority of your hair first and roots last is heat makes bleach process faster, so the heat of your head makes the bleach closer to it process twice as fast. oftentimes, people start at the roots, and end up with white roots, but orange hair. this is called hot roots ): keep checking on how things are processing bear in mind that saturated hair is two shades darker than dry hair, so even if it looks more brown or a darker orange, that means it'll be lighter when dry. when in doubt just leave it in for 40 minutes
step 11: when things look light enough, or once it's been 40 minutes, it's time to finally rinse. just... hop in the shower and let cool water run over your hair lol. you want to avoid heat because that will keep the hair shaft open, and heat causes damage and can further strip it, whereas cool isn't as damaging and can help close the shaft your hair will feel slippery from the bleach while rinsing, but it'll start feeling more normal when the bleach is rinsed out. it also will likely feel more dry, and that's... normal :,) when rinsing, face away from the shower, and tilt your head back a bit so it's spraying near the top-back of your head. don't get your hair in your face. this will cause bleach to drip on your face, and it could possibly get in your eyes, hence facing away and tilting your head back so it drips behind you step 12: let your hair air dry. don't squeeze it to get water out, and don't put it up in a turban wrap. (doing that damages your hair on a normal day, no less a bleach day) don't use a blow dryer, because heat will damage it more, so avoid heat tools. even using a blow dryer on a cool setting may agitate the hair too much, so i recommend just letting it air dry. pat it with a towel, but otherwise leave it alone bleached hair's shaft is open and it is more porous, which means it sucks up and retains water more. this means that it can take a while to air dry. it takes mine roughly 4 hours, so that's a waiting game too step 13: once dry, look at the color. did you miss some spots? is it light enough? you want it to be yellow. if it's still brown or orange, then bad news: you're going to have to bleach again. (if you don't want to do that you'll need to use a darker toner to tone it to a nicer color. see next section) if you need to spot treat, repeat previous steps to make the mix again, but ONLY coat the parts that are too dark and wrap them in foil to separate them from other parts of your hair, to even things out if you're doing your whole head again, then follow all the steps, but this time you likely won't need to process as long, and you might want to use 20 volume developer to be less harsh on the hair. always keep an eye on it. DO NOT BLEACH MORE THAN TWICE IN A SINGLE DAY, or a few months, for that matter. but especially not more than twice in a day. two max and you're done for at least two months pictured: example of color you want vs color you don't step 14: clean up some of the mess :,) wash your bowl, fork, measuring cups, etc. leave what you left on the counters to protect them, because the process isn't done, but you're going to be reusing your bowl and other supplies in part 03. make sure they're all dry before beginning part 03 part 03: toningstep 01: mix 10 volume developer with your toner in your bowl. the ratio for this is also usually 2:1, but again, read the instructions on your products. this time you don't need a very thick consistency, so this mixture will likely be more runny, and that's okay step 02: get those gloves back on to protect your hands from developer and being dyed step 03: get to work getting the toner into your hair, but BE QUICK. since toner is thinner than bleach, it's easier to saturate all of your hair with it. toner will be adding pigment to the hair, so you want to be fast so that all of the hair is saturated as quickly as possible the reason for this is if you leave toner in one section of your hair longer than another, when you rinse then you might have unevenly toned hair D: you want to start from the roots this time, and do the tips last! the ends of your hair will be more damaged and more porous, and therefore suck up more pigment, so you want the toner on the tips less time than elsewhere. you don't necessarily need to section things out meticulously this time, because again, you want to be fast personally what i do is i clip a top section up, and i just use my hands to slather the toner on and work it into my hair, then i'll let the top section down and do the same thing. it takes maybe five minutes tops to get all of hair saturated with toner step 04: pop a shower cap on, and then wait again :,) the typical time to leave toner in is 30 minutes, but again, check the instructions on your products while it's developing, the toner is going to turn a dark purple. don't worry, this is normal! purple is opposite yellow on the color wheel, so it will neutralize the yellow in your hair, ie.... tone it :,) step 05: rinse it out again. you're going to want to check the water dripping from your hair. when it runs clear and no more purple is dripping out, then that means you rinsed it all if your hair was a darker yellow, then you might want to use a blue shampoo during this step, and if it was a lighter yellow you might want to use a purple shampoo. this will also add more brass neutralizing pigment to the hair. don't leave these shampoos in too long, or they might dye the hair tho. i personally only leave them in for up to three minutes, or less depending on how my hair is looking i personally also use a protein treatment, which uses a specific shampoo as prep, so this is the step i use that shampoo as well step 06: wait for your hair to dry again, and the end result should be platinum blond(e)! :) or at least an even, lighter shade of hair, depending on what you were aiming for and how the toning process went part 04: immediate damage controlstep 01: do a protein treatment. brands and instructions can vary so follow instructions that come with what you pick up, but for real do a protein treatment. usually these treatments are hardcore and you can only do one once in a certain period of time, so make sure to keep track of when you do what step 02: rinse the protein treatment out step 03: do a bond sustainer treatment. these can also vary step 04: do a deep hair mask, with a focus on restoring. depending, you can probably mix this with step 03, but if you can't, then rinse step 03 out then do step 04 on its own. what i personally do is make a mask with a bond sustainer, deep conditioner, and oils and leave it in for an hour if not more step 05: rinse out the bond sustainer and/or mask step 06: put in leave in conditioner and some leave in oil and allow hair to air dry part 05: your life revolves around your hair now
part 06: product recommendations
* generic is the same as it's a 10, except it does not have these ingredients: avena sativa kernel extract, hydrolyzed collagen, isopropylalcohol, retinyl palmitate, sodium ascorbyl phosphate, sodium hydroxide, phenoxyethanol, potassium sorbate, propylparaben, sodiumbenzoate ** generic is the same as it's a 10, except it does not have these ingredients: citric acid, isopropyl alcohol, tetrasodium edta, phenoxyethanol, potassium benzoate, passiumsorbate, propylparaben, sodium benzoate, benzyl benzoate, benzyl salicylate, butylphenyl methylpropional, hydroxycitronellal, hydroxyisohexyl 3-cyclohexene carboxaldehyde, linalool
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