Friday, May 27, 2011

Color brightening tea rinse

Keeping on the tea trend from my last post, I want to talk about how tea can be used to brighten any shade of hair from red to blonde to brown. There is a type of tea that works for every shade.

Brunettes – Just brew two cups of strong black tea and use as a rinse for your hair after shampooing. Let it sit for 10 minutes. It will darken the hair a bit, so don't use this if you have very light brown that you want to keep light. Rinsing your hair with black tea will add shine and highlights to your beautiful brown locks.

Blondes (or light brown) – All you need to do is make a batch of chamomile tea. Just use 3 or 4 tea bags in about 2 cups of water. You need the tea for your hair to be a lot stronger than tea you would drink. Let it steep until strong. After shampooing wring the excess water out of your hair and saturate your hair with the chamomile tea. Allow the tea to sit for 10 minutes before rinsing. This will also lighten a bit and add shine. If you put chamomile in your hair before sitting out in the sun, it will add highlights.

Red heads – Lighter shades of red can use chamomile, but to bring out more red highlights you can use rooibos tea or hibiscus tea. Rooibos tea is a very lovely shade of red orange which is perfect for enhancing highlights for those with red hair. It also adds lovely shine. Just let the tea sit for 10 minutes after shampooing.

Tea can also improve the general health of hair and leave it in a much better condition. You can use a tea rinse once a week.

4 comments:

  1. Hello, have you tried this yourself? How would you prevent the tea from dropping everywhere, unless you stay in the shower? I'm intrigued, but see complications in this process... ;)

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  2. Hi Eva! Yes, I have. I always do things like this while I'm in the shower. A rinse is done after shampooing, so what I do is shampoo my hair and rinse the suds out, then apply the tea (or whatever rinse I'm using at the moment) and relax in the tub while I let the mixture sit. I then turn the shower back on and rinse the hair again. Hope this helps!

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  3. Ah, yes, this would work well if you have a tub. Alas, I don't, but will give it a try anyway. :)

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  4. I hope you figure something out! Good luck! =)

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