Color Melt
Color Melt. The purpose of this technique is to make the base color look like it is "melting" into the other tones in the hair. It has more dimension than a color melt, but a more noticeable transition as well.
My best friend and client Jamie wanted a color melt to allow her roots to grow out seamlessly. Usually, a small amount of your natural color (or darker if you wish) is applied to the root, when the hair is damp or wet for a more even distribution of color because the wet hair has a more even porosity. The goal with color melting is to not know where one shade begins or ends.
The pretty hair color is one you're going to see everywhere this fall.
Basically, it's when three colors blend into the hair seamlessly.
We are adding or darkening color, not stripping it. There are actually a few methods and coloring melt and pour soap. You want low-maintenance color that doesn't need root touch-ups every six weeks, which means you need to tell your stylist that you're looking for a color melt, a root smudge, or subtle balayage.
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