It is always necessary to use a bleaching agent (and not a dye) to lighten the colour of hair. This mat be bleach, peroxide or sunlight.
Bleaching your hair will cause damage to it. To minimize damage, have a professional hairdresser color your hair.
Well Kinda. You see,there is one way my sister use to do,she would put lemon juice in her light brown and blondeish hair and let it dry.an hour later it would be more blondeish.but i dont think it would turn DARK brown hair to blonde hair.it would probaly turn your hair into lighter brown.
Another user suggested: Bleach isn't that good for your hair...but if you want it lighter get highlights I suggest: Highlights involve the same color removal that bleaching does...So the same damage. Damage happens with color removal. The lighter your hair color is, the less damage caused. If you already have light blonde hair, yes, it will cause damage, but it won't cause the same damage that a brown haired girl would suffer from. If you plan on going through with the bleaching, don't wash your hair the day before and the day of the bleaching (you want to maintain as many oils as you can, since bleaching can be stripping) and you want to condition with a special intensive conditioning treatment, post bleach.
you dont "dye" your hair blonde. you bleach it. and hair bleach is a very harsh chemical on the hair. if you dont do it properly your hair may fall out. but in other words, it is possible to bleach your hair and much less damaging if you have virgin hair(meaning you have no other colour of dye already on your hair). but after bleaching your hair will still be "fried" and not very soft. the best thing to do would be to just get it done by a professional versus trying to do it yourself.
Bleaching is a chemical reaction.
You can clean hardwood floors without damaging it by first cleaning it like you would clean on tiles. Sweep up the floor for trash and then use a bucket and mop it clean and dry.
Why on Earth would you do that?
The oxidation state of chlorine in bleaching powder would be zero.
If I were you I'd let it grow out just a bit before dyeing it again. Sounds like you've done quite a bit to your hair, bleaching it is pretty damaging. So without damaging further just let it grow out enough that your HAIRDRESSER can match a dye to your roots!! I used to dye my hair a few shades darker than my natural color. When I decided to stop I let it grow out and my hairdresser was able to dye my hair to match my roots. After about 6 weeks it had faded a bit and you could still see a slight difference between my roots and the dyed hair. So I had her do it once more and now its been a few months and you cant tell at all where the roots are and where the dye starts. Hope this helps. I would just focus on not damaging your hair to the point where its unmanageable.
I am a licensed cosmetologist and would not recommend using sun in. It is very damaging to hair. I have had to do alot of color corrections on clients who have used sun in.
Without using a chemical to strip the color, using a clarifying shampoo would be the next best thing. It's a slower process though, gradually fading the color with each shampoo.
no.