yes ketchup does do that but not with all hair types but most of them also if you soak your hair in baby oil all day for about 2 days and that gets rid of all of the split ends in your hair and all of the bad bits.
use a red based color and apply it to your hair color formula or to remove some of the green in your hair but it will not remove all, wash ur hair with ketchup, it actually works !
If it did, then she would of just bleached it again
Wash it with Ketchup. Tomato will neutralize the green color.
Depends how bleached it is. If it's bleached out completely, no.
Usually it can, but sometimes hair needs a little more. I used to use apple cider vinegar when I had a pool. All I did was take a pitcher of warm water and about half a cup of the vinegar, or more, mix it, and rinse my hair with it after shampooing. Vinegar has a certain acid that smoothes the hair folicle as well, so not only should it remove the green, your hair should feel nice as well.
The easiest way to do this is to get a bottle of ketchup, comb it through your hair leave it on for a couple of minutes, rinse it off in the shower, shampoo twice and then condition it, it sounds strange but its a great trick and pretty cheap instead of having to go out and buy some professional product that costs silly amounts, the acid in the ketchup actually lifts the green/grey tint from your hair and it definitely works, hope this helped :)
not necessarily, it depends how much chlorine you have in your pool. the more chlorine the better you have a chance of turning it green.
It will cost you more than $200 to get your hair professionally bleached.
Gold bleached hair needs a medium ash blonde to tone it down.
yes, but whatever colour you dye it will be lighter than on un-bleached hair
The sun could further bleach your hair, depending on the degree to which it was bleached originally.
Just before the Olympics, Ryan Lochte bleached and died his hair to a light silver color. It looked sharp and made headlines. However, after the Olympics started, people started noticing Ryan's hair turning slightly greener by the day. The green comes from high levels of copper compounds in the pool water. Freshly bleached hair will start to absorb the copper, and the green shows more due to the light hair color.