A close-up of my hair after henna. |
Once a month I smear my head with green mud. And my hair thanks me for it. Yup. I am a henna advocate. When I first started using henna, my hair was dull, lifeless and chemically damaged. After only a few months of henna, my hair was transformed. Now, several years later, I am in my mid-forties and my hair is thick, shiny and nearly waist length. Who knew mud could be so great?
Only one problem. I'm in my mid-forties. That means I'm a leetle bit gray. Okay. I'm a lot gray. When I first started using henna, I only had a little gray. The henna just made my gray look like lovely red highlights. But the more gray you have, the more red your hair will look after henna. I'm getting a lot of gray hair, so I was starting to look like this:
Now, if Lucille Ball is the look you're going for, then great. Hop over to my How To Henna Your Hair post and I'll tell you all about it. But if you want a more auburn look, and you have a lot of gray, keep reading.
In my research about henna, everything pretty much said that you can use henna as long as you only have 10% gray or less. Great. So I guess that means you can live a natural lifestyle until you turn gray, and then you either need to use chemicals or embrace the silver sheen. Or look like Lucille Ball. Thanks anyway.
I started experimenting with Indigo (more on that in a minute) and longer wait times. My results were mixed. Then one day Rula, one of my lovely readers, commented on this blog and sorted out my dilemma for me. You guys really should comment more. I learn so much from your comments. Just saying.
Before I tell you Rula's ingenious solution to the henna for gray hair dilemma, let me give you a little back round information.
Before you can make any changes to the way you henna your gray hair, you need to know how to use henna in the first place. I tell you how I do my hair and give links for supplies and information here.
Once you know how henna works, there are a few special things you need to know about henna for gray hair:
Lawsone Content: The lawsone content of henna affects how rich and deep the dye will be. Less lawsone means less gray coverage. More lawsone means more gray coverage. Mehandi.com will tell you if you are getting a high lawsone content. The henna I purchase has a higher than 2% lawsone content. (If you are standing in the local health food store looking at the back of a henna box, put it down and slowly back away. If you are really careful, it probably won't bite you, but you should leave the area immediately to protect yourself. I only use body art quality henna that comes in little pouches and has nothing in it but very finely ground henna leaf. I have only found it online. I have had so many people read my posts, rush out and buy some sort of pre-mixed boxed stuff at the store and then tell me they didn't get my results. I can't vouch for what they put in that stuff. Go ahead and spring for the good stuff!)
Longer Wait Times: If you don't have gray hair, you can rinse the henna off in a couple hours, but if you want good coverage on stubborn gray hair, you need to be more patient. I usually leave the henna on for 6 hours -- sometimes I will even leave it on overnight, but I never rinse it off in under 4 hours.
Indigo: Indigo is just what it sounds like. It is the plant used to make indigo (denim blue) colored dye. Indigo can be your friend if you use it properly. But if you just slap it on haphazardly, you will end up looking like this:
You don't want that.
The indigo for hair is very finely powdered indigo leaf -- nothing else. There is an art to using indigo. In some ways it is easier. Henna needs an acidic element to release the dye and a long sit time for the dye release to occur. Indigo is just mixed with water and used immediately. That part is easier. But you don't want to apply it by itself unless you like blue hair.
If you want jet black hair, apply henna first, and alone. Then when your henna is all done and your hair is dry, mix and apply indigo. You can learn more about it in the free Henna for Hair ebook.
If you want brown hair, mix your henna first. When you are all ready to color, mix your indigo. Then you will need to stir the two together. You need to stir, stir and stir some more, or you could end up with blue streaks. The more indigo you add to your henna, the darker brown you will be. When I have done this, I used half henna/half indigo or 3/4 henna/ 1/4 indigo. Again, you can find lots more information about how to use indigo and how to mix it to get the color you want in the Henna for Hair ebook.
My problem with using an indigo/henna mix on my entire head: I always like the results the first time I use it. The second time, I think it's a little darker than I wanted, but still okay. By the third time, I think it is way too dark. Once I experimented with just a little indigo in my henna. It took longer to get to the way too dark stage, but I still did. Indigo seems to build up over time. Sigh... What's a gray headed girl to do?
This is the point that Rula stepped in with an ingenious idea that totally revolutionized my hairy world. This is what she said:
"....What I did this time was I put the henna for 6 hours and washed it. That was 2 days ago. I kept about 3 tbs of the mix. Today I mixed 50 gr. of the indigo then added the 3tbs of mixed henna to it and applied to my roots. I left it for 20 min only and washed my hair. It did not become dark. [It's a] lovely auburn, What I used to do before was I used to put hibiscus tea in my henna mix. It made it go dark and more purplish which I did not like. This time I did not. I found it much better. I never tried mixing both in one application. It is a hassle I'm sure you know, but henna is very good. This kind is by far the best I have ever tried..."
After reading her comments, I decided to try her method, or something very similar to it -- it worked wonderfully. Did you get what she said? Here's what I did:
1. I colored my hair using henna and my regular method (here) and saving a out few tablespoons. I left it on for 6 full hours. Then I rinsed and washed as usual.
2. When my hair was dry (the same day for me, Rula waited 2 days), I mixed enough indigo with water to make a few tablespoons. Then I made a mix of half henna/half indigo.
3. I applied the henna/indigo mix to the roots only and set a timer for 20 minutes (I might try 30 minutes next time for a slightly deeper, richer color), then I rinsed and washed my hair again. Ta Da! Blended auburn roots without going too dark over the rest of my hair. Thank you Rula!!!
Here is why it works:
First: By just using straight henna on the bulk of your hair, you get the lovely effects of henna without the gradual darkening effects of the indigo over the bulk of your hair. But your gray roots are left looking like this:
This is me after rinsing the henna out. My hair is still wet, but the gray roots are really red and very noticeable. We need to fix that. Time for stage two. |
Excuse the terrible picture, but this is after the the second stage application. I was using an all-over henna/indigo application for the last few color jobs, so my hair is a little brown right now (The indigo I put all over my head last time will fade out eventually). Also, this is immediately after the second application, so the colors haven't had time to oxidize and mellow yet (that takes 2-3 days). I like Rula's way much, much better than the way I had been doing it lately (henna/indigo mix all over). The roots are blending in nicely with the rest of my hair.
Third: By leaving the henna/indigo mix on the gray roots only 20 minutes (I might try 30 minutes next time for a slightly richer color), you avoid ending up with black roots (remember, indigo applied after henna will give you black hair). You just deepen the color of your roots and blend them into the rest of your hair. Perfect. Now I have auburn hair again, and I can keep it that way.
Thank you Rula! You're idea deserves to be shared with the henna world! We really can keep using henna when we are more than 10% gray!
Have a great day!
Angela
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Oh my God Angela! Thank you so much! You should see the smile on my face! I enjoyed reading your post.
ReplyDeleteI do both applications the same day all the time, but that time I was stuck at home because we had the most horrible snow storm so I decided to wait. No one was going to see me anyway in my Lucille Ball roots :) If you add about 2/3 indigo to 1/3 henna, you can leave it for 20 min or as you said about half an hour for half half mix. I keep on experimenting and get diffirent results, but this is the best method for the color we want.
I'm so happy about this post.
Love xxxx
Your hair looks great. Any tips for light brown hair?
ReplyDeleteDear Alaa and Angela,
ReplyDeleteI had a death in the family, my aunt.That's why I did not check for a while. I answered on the previous henna post. Sorry for the late reply.
Thank you dear Angela. It is God's will. I hope she is in a better place now.
ReplyDeleteHello Rula,
ReplyDeleteMy condolences on the loss of your aunt.
Thank you for answering my question, I will get a shop and ship account from Aramex soon. How long did it take for your order from Amazon.Uk to arrive to Amman? Did you have any problems with your order? I've heard that any powdery substance is not allowed to enter Jordan; it might need an approval from the Ministry of Health. Is that true?
Dear Alaa,
ReplyDeleteNo, it arrives through Aramex without any problem. If I order from the States from Mehandi, it takes about 2 weeks. However, the one from Amazon usually arrives within 5 days. Here is my email pearly115@yahoo.co.uk if you need me to answer you quickly.
Hi Angela, How are you doing?
By the way, yesterday a total stranger asked me where do I color my hair because it's beautiful! I proudly said henna :)
That is so awesome, Rula! There's nothing like a compliment from a stranger to make one's day! :D
ReplyDeleteIt sure does :)
ReplyDeleteHi Angela
ReplyDeleteMy hair is dark brown, now almost 40 % white hair. I have been dying my hair for the past 13 years with chemical dyes, which made my hair dry and my scalp itchy. I just recently bought organic body art quality henna for hair and organic indigo. I was wondering if I could color my grey roots with a mix of henna and indigo in one application since my hair is already dark from the chemical dyes. How much henna and indigo should i use ?
Hi Angela,
ReplyDeleteToday, I did a test on my hair by taking a couple of sections. I made a mix of one teaspoon henna and two teaspoons indigo and applied it to my roots and left it for 11/2 hours. The resulting color was shocking; the grey hair turned green. What happened? What do you suggest I do?
Thank you for the quick reply, I think you're right, maybe using more indigo than henna made my grey hair turn to green (it's actually a mix between blue, green and yellow). Tomorrow I will do it your way; I will dye my hair straight with henna then followed by a mix of henna and indigo on the roots.
ReplyDeleteI'm positive that my henna and indigo are pure. Today was my first experience with indigo but I used to henna my hair when I was in my twenties so I know what good quality powered henna looks and smells like.
Let me know how it goes, Lena. I've never tried to correct too much indigo, so it will help all of us to learn what to do when something goes wrong.
ReplyDeleteHi Angela,
ReplyDeleteIt worked out great ; the grey hair is completely covered with
a nice brown color. It blended well with my dark hair. What I did is, first I left the henna for 4 hours, then I made a mix of half henna and half indigo and applied it to
my roots. I left it for 2 hours and washed it.
My hair grows fast, so I might need to do my roots every two weeks and henna all my hair once a month. My hair feels soft and shiny ; I love it.
Thank you for this blog.
Oh, Lena, I'm so glad it worked out for you! That is awesome. My hair grows really fast, too. I should be doing my roots every two weeks but I'm too lazy, so I look at gray roots for the last two weeks of every month. Sigh... Tonight is a henna night for me. Good bye gray!!
ReplyDeleteI'm so glad that I found your page. I have long hair, like yours, and I am so sick of using chemical dyes and damaging my hair. I sought out a natural alternative and my search brought me to a whole new world! Henna, and Indigo, and Cassia - oh my!
ReplyDeleteI did a ton of research online and ordered BAQ henna and indigo from HennaSooq. It was smelly, messy and a complete pain in the butt but I absolutely love the result. Great color, great feel.....great big smile :) That was about a month ago and now it's time to do it again.
I'm turning 40 shortly and my greys are getting thicker. The battle is on! I was concerned with my hair getting darker and darker due to continued use of henna/indigo but thanks to Rula - now I have a plan.
I'm going to henna my whole head tonight and then henna/indigo just the roots in the morning. I mixed my henna a few hours ago and I'm trying some ginger mixed in to try and kill the smell. It was recommended on Mehandi's website and I hope it works. I found it nauseating last time. Ugh.
My husband is not home tonight and that's a good thing. I thought he was going to have an anxiety attack during my first application. He was absolutely convinced that my hair would be bright green and that would result in a very loud, late-night meltdown from me. Ha!
Full steam ahead! :)
Rula is great, isn't she Susan? I don't know why I didn't think of it before she commented, but I'm glad she did. I have been using her method ever since and it's working great.
ReplyDeleteThat's pretty funny about your husband. Mine is used to me by now, but I still try to henna when he is away or asleep. I prefer to keep a little bit of my feminine mystique if I can, and sporting a henna-head isn't the way to do it. Let us know how your hair turns out!
Thanks Angela. Hope it works for you too Susan.
ReplyDeleteHi Angela, how are you doing?
ReplyDeleteHello Patti. Thank you for your question. I always use both shampoo and conditioner after henna. That way I get all the henna out and my hair has a lovely shine. I've heard other henna users say you should wait to shampoo. In the beginning I tried that, but I couldn't get all that henna mud out of my long hair without shampoo. If you leave the henna on long enough, it will penetrate the hair shaft and doesn't need to stay on any longer. I leave my henna on for at least four hours (when I'm in a hurry), usually six and sometimes overnight. One of the wonderful things about using henna instead of chemical dyes is how long the color lasts -- henna doesn't fade like chemical red dyes. You shouldn't have any trouble with the color fading because you used shampoo. By all means, though, do what you are comfortable with. Shampoo, no shampoo, or only conditioner will all work fine.
ReplyDeleteHi,Angela I,m a Norwegian 54 years old lady,and used to henna my hair many years ago.Then I stopped because to much work.Then I went to a hairdresser a went slowly light blonde.(I'm naturally a dark mousy blonde) But because of my 75 % grays,I thought I looked washed out.So I though to go more naturally,so I bought naturtint dark blonde.I went vey dark and on the lenght greenish.So I bought a hair dye remover from boots.It took all the dye away,but was gingery up,and little greenish on the lenght.So I used casting chocolate on it,also It was not covering probably on the lengths.So I bought surya henna powder in. Burgundy it's now a chocolate copper on top,but less red on lenght.I was wondering I want to use morrocan henna from now on just,but will my roots be very orange since I'm 75 % Gray.and also how much indigo to put in to get a auburn red colour on it.And which henna give the darkest stain,I don't like orange yellow hair,thank you.
ReplyDeleteHi there, what was your hair color befor you started henna? Thanks!
ReplyDeleteHow dark was your hair?? Im trying to see how red my hair wold turn out (hopefully like yours). Its a very dark brown.
ReplyDeleteHmmm...how to explain it.... In terms of wood, it was about walnut colored (as opposed to pine or maple or something). It was pretty dark, but not black or so dark that people thought it was black. I'm trying to think how else to describe it. Dirt colored? But that isn't very flattering...
ReplyDeleteCould you post a picture?? (sooo sorry, I know im annoying)
ReplyDeleteHow red do you think my hair would turn out with my natural hair color?
ReplyDeleteThat's hard to say, since I have never actually seen you. But going on the "very dark" description, I would say that it should become a deep, rich auburn. It will seem brighter the first few days, and then mellow out a bit. But, again, that's just a guess since I haven't seen your hair. And if you use boxed "henna" from a store, it's anybody's guess. Sometimes they mix other things in that. If you use body art quality henna, though, you will probably end up with a hair color similar to mine (based on your dark hair description).
ReplyDeleteHooray a post that keeps my hopes of continuing to use henna AND have long hair alive!!! I use a mix of henna and indigo but parts of my hair are starting to turn black, I am going to try this method and pray it works for me . Thank you :-)
ReplyDeleteHi Angela, I ordered henna & indigo from Mehandi a few days ago & while I am waiting for it to arrive, I have been reading all over the internet about henna & about what mix to apply. I have colored my hair about 7 times in the past with a box dye & I always hated using it because of the chemicals. My natural hair color is black & I have about 10-15% gray ~ it is sprinkled throughout my hair with the most concentrated areas on each side near the front. I want to have deep red / mahogany highlights were the grays are & the rest of my black hair to have a red tint to it from the henna. I am planning on using straight henna & leave it on for 4 hours, then after rinsing, if the grays are too bright & orangy, should I color my whole head with 2/3 henna & 1/3 indigo mix for about 30 minutes or just the sides near the front? As I mentioned, I want to have the deep red / mahogany highlights to be where the grays are now but I do not want to go too dark & make my hair all black & lose the highlights. Not sure how much indigo to use, because I don't want to use too much & make my hair too dark & black. Thanks for your help, Paula
ReplyDeleteHello Paula. This is a great question, and one that I see come up often. In my experience, indigo gets darker on your hair each time you use it. After about 3 applications, you won't have highlights anymore and your hair will be really dark. Also, I have heard a lot of people complain that straight henna on blonde or gray hair left it orange instead of red. Often, that is because they didn't leave it on long enough and/or had too low lawsone.
ReplyDeleteIf it was me, this is what I would do if I had your situation (black hair with gray that I wanted to be deep mahogany with red highlights.) First of all, I would make sure that I had henna with a high lawsone content (greater than 2%). A higher lawsone content will give you better coverage on gray and deeper red on dark hair. Then I would leave the henna on for at least 6 hours rather than 4. The longer sit time allows the henna to really penetrate the hair. For the first 2 or 3 applications, I would use no indigo at all. The red of the henna will become richer over the course of 2 or 3 applications, until your hair reaches a saturation point.
If, after all that, you feel that the gray in the length of your hair is too red, you might try a 3/4 henna/1/4 indigo mix. I would only do that once or at most twice, though. It seems that indigo really takes off on that second and third application and will turn your hair really really dark. At that point, it is likely that you will lose all highlights and end up with a uniform blue/black/brown color.
If your roots are really gray, and therefore making red roots when you henna alone, I would use Rula's method for dealing with gray roots as indicated in this post.
I hope that helps you, Paula. Let me know how it goes for you!
And PS- I just saw your Titus 2 dedication. LOVE IT!!! <3!!!
ReplyDeleteThank you thank you thank you for the citric acid info too!! This helps a ton!!! I LOVE my henna and truly will never switch~ The health and shine of my hair far outweighs the fact that my color may be off a bit after using it for so long...but it's wonderful to have nice natural deas to modify it a bit!! YAY!!!
ReplyDeleteSooooo I just did the 1/3 henna and 2/3 indigo mixture (left on for 1/2 hour)....and YAY!!!! IT'S FANTASTIC!!!! Sooooo very happy to have found you last night!!!! Now I'll have to try the citric acid next! What do you find to be the best amount of water/CA to use at this point? I definitely don't want to cause any damage whatsoever because the henna has my hair as healthy and shiny as I could have ever prayed for! :D :D :D
ReplyDeleteHi Angela! I have been using the two-step process for about six months and getting great coverage. However, my hair is thick, coarse and curly, and now it seems to be getting rougher. Do you think it could be because of henna / indigo? Also, do you use a natural / organic shampoo or a chemical shampoo to maintain the color for longer duration?
ReplyDeleteChristine, how long did you leave the henna on? If you didn't leave it on long enough or if the henna didn't have a high enough lawsone, it would be a more of an orange tint. If your gray hair is more stubborn with accepting the dye, it will take longer. If that's the case, try leaving the henna step on overnight. That gives the henna time to really penetrate the hair shaft. The green tint could be a couple things. If you mixed the indigo in and didn't leave it on long enough, it could look greenish. Or if you have very hard water, the mineral build-up on your hair might be doing it. Mehandi sells a product (I think it's called Rain Water) that removes mineral build-up from hard water. You said you bought your henna from Mehandi, so we know the were no weird chemicals mixed in. Some of the over-the-counter henna has things mixed in that can turn your hair green. Also, there could possibly be a reaction if you had just had your hair colored chemically. Older chemical color shouldn't be a problem, though.
ReplyDeleteWhen I did the 2 step, I washed and let my hair dry between the henna step and the henna/indigo step. I haven't used chemical dyes in at least 10 years, so I don't have any experience with the 2 step method on chemically dyed length and fresh roots.
I don't think there is any way to get the purplish color with henna/indigo. Maybe someone out there can chime in if they know of a way. With indigo, it really builds up on the hair shaft and can do bad things to your hair if you use it more than once or at most, twice. That's why the 2 step process works so well -- it means you only use indigo on the roots, not the length. However, if you have two-toned hair, it might need an all over henna/indigo treatment once to help even things out. With indigo, less is more. Every person's hair is different, so you'll have to experiment. I wouldn't go more than 1/2 henna/ 1/2 indigo, unless I was sure that's what I wanted. I might even start with just 1/4 or 1/3 indigo first, though. You can always do it again, but it is really hard to get indigo out if you use too much. Also, henna oxidizes over the first 2-3 days. In other words, it deepens and gets richer during that time. So don't panic if it looks a bit orange-red at first. Let us know what you decide to do. We learn from each other around here. ;)
Angela (and Rula!!!)!!!--
ReplyDeleteThank you so so SO much!! I have medium-dark brown hair that is 50% gray in front and on top, and have used your method very successfully for a couple of months. My new grey growth really stands out from my hair, so I try to henna and then hendigo it every 4 weeks, and I basically do exactly what you do, except,
I leave the henna in "just" 4 hours, and, since I'm going more for "medium-dark brown" with highlights, I have been doing a 1/3 henna, 2/3 indigo mix and leaving it on for 30 minutes just on my roots. I think to avoid things getting too dark (as I age,) I may see what your hendigo recipe (half henna and half indigo) is like for me, but it may be too red. If so, I'll add some cassia to my 1/3 to 2/3 mix and adjust as I need to.
Thanks again!!--jenny r
Angela,
ReplyDeleteTwo more things I forgot to mention:
1. I also only use Mehandi henna, indigo, amla, cassia. Amazing products and I LOVE that they've been tested!!
2. Whenever I initially henna as the first step and my greys turn bozo-the-clown orange, it IS startling and a bit terrifying. But then, minutes later, after applying the hendigo on top of the orange, waiting 30 minutes, and rinsing, it's completely covered the orange and my greys are now...brown!! Even my hair stylist was shocked and impressed!! It seems too good to be true...but it works!!
Thanks again!!!!xx
Jerryr, thank you for sharing your experience! I am so thrilled that it is working well for you. I love how you've tweaked this to make it work for you. If you decide to add the cassia, let me know how that works for you. I keep thinking that I'll need to go a little lighter as I get older, and have thought about playing with cassia to do that. I'd love to hear your experience if you decide to try it. It's wonderful to know that we can stay with natural dyes as we get older!
ReplyDeleteHello Angela, the results were so good!! The best results in two years of using henna. I left the henna/indigo mix on for an hour and used almost 1/2 henna and 1/2 indigo (my henna was a bit runny when I was mixing it, so I added a bit more, as a result there was slightly more henna than indigo in the final mix). When I washed my hair, combed it and saw the results my very first thought was "Angela, you are good, you are so very good!" I am delighted to have found your blog and this very effective two step process to cover grey with minimal indigo involved.
ReplyDeleteThank you, thank you thank you!!
Hi Angela !
ReplyDeleteLove your knowledge and how gracious you are.
I think I read that you have been using henna for the last 10 years, do you do a whole head henna every time? I am considering going back to henna, I used to do it when I was in my 20's but when my grays turned into whites, the neon orange I would get was not becoming anymore. :) Used chemicals for a long time, and my hair is lifeless, almost no shine, dry, etc. My main question is, how do you deal with the henna build up? or is there such a thing? or the build up of indigo for that matter ?, I will try to achieve a medium brown-auburn, although I know it will be hard on almost white hair, but I am willing to experiment. For older people like me, you can always be a little eccentric and wear hats, :)
Would appreciate your reply, and thank you for your time.
I am so glad it worked, Ficalli Gus!! And I love your idea for those stubborn little hairs -- so much quicker and easier than what I've been doing, so I'll be much less likely to let them go too long. I'm gonna have to get myself some of those containers. I already have a stray mascara brush. Perfect!
ReplyDeleteI think that sounds great, Diane. Let me know how the potassium bitartrate works.
ReplyDeleteI used henna for the first time a month ago on 9 inches of previously colored auburn hair with 2 inches of medium brown, 20 percent gray roots.. loved the color but wondering if I use straight henna all over this time will my ends get darker? More red? Will it get darker each time? Not wanting my ends to get much darker ..just have never understood what happens if u continue to layer the henna.
ReplyDeleteHenna might get a richer, deeper color the first couple times, but it won't get darker. Once it reaches saturation (usually in one or two applications) the color won't change. It won't keep getting darker like indigo does. Henna works with the existing color of the hair and penetrates the hair shaft. Indigo coats the hair. That's why henna doesn't get darker, but indigo does.
ReplyDeleteYesheChodron, I don't know of anyone who has tried this, so let us know how it works for you. Indigo used to be used to dye denim, so that might give you an idea of the color blue it might be. I'm thinking it would be darker, rather that a powder blue, but I don't know for sure.
ReplyDeleteHi. I have been hennaing my hair for the last year, and using a mix of indigo and henna as 2nd application. However, haing lots of greys, they are staying bright orange and not absorbing the blackmof the henna! My source is good, however am wondering if I should try their body art henna, rather than their hair henna. Any suggestions? Otherwise Ill have to grow jt out, which looks awful, or cop off my wait long hair. I really dont want to do that. Am about 40 percent grey, heading into 50 percent. Help!
ReplyDeleteHi everyone, I really enjoyed reading your posts. I've been using henna off and on for five years. I used body art quality and loved the shade. My hair is naturally dark brown with copper highlights. Now I'm about 10% gray, especially at my temples. My biggest frusttration is the henna will start to fade after a few days on my temples. For instance, I hennaed on Wed and can see a few grays poking through.
ReplyDeleteI used Red Raj henna which gave a red highlight but it also had some orange. I will buy from Mehandi from now on. Anyway, I wanted to find out if anyone else's starts coming off so soon? I usually leave it on for four hours and sometimes overnight. I apps oil to my hair as it's naturally dry. I used indigo in the past but then went to straight henna because I thought maybe the indigo was affecting the gray coverage. I do like the idea to touch up my roots every two weeks as I'm not trying to darken my hair, just love the highlights.
Any ideas would be appreciated.
Do you think that the indigo inhibits covering the gray? I had switched to using only henna but would like to add a small amount of henna to tone down the red. Thanks
ReplyDeleteI always bought my henna from Mehandi.com. They have very high quality henna with no add-ins. They test each batch of henna to make sure it is pure and to get the lawsone content. The variety I bought from them would change based on what henna they were getting with a high lawsone content. They always tell what the content is. Just look for the ones they say will cover gray. As far as the indigo inhibiting gray coverage, it shouldn't. It has a tendency to build up on the hair, though. After awhile, it starts looking dull, drab and dark. That's why we do the roots only -- so it won't build up too much. But it shouldn't interfere with gray coverage.
ReplyDeleteOkay, I'd heard of Mehindi but had purchased from Henna Sooq. I think part of the problem too is I don't always wash with a clarifying shampoo before application, so maybe my roots aren't rough enough to really absorb the stain.
DeleteHenna lover, I found the lemon juice too drying, too. I used orange juice, but only about 1/4 cup and the rest was water. You just need something acidic to release the dye. I've heard that people have used lemon tea, but I have no experience with that. I found the orange juice to be much less drying to my scalp than the lemon juice (neither seemed to bother my hair), but even the orange juice made my scalp itch in the week or so after a henna job. I don't know if apple juice or green tea would be acidic enough, but you might try the lemon tea. If you use the orange juice, be sure to strain it. Orange juice pulp is next to impossible to get out of your hair. Experience talking...
ReplyDelete