How To Get the Vintage-Inspired Look You Want!

Dying Your Own Hair

Rockabilly hairstyles come in all shapes and sizes – just like us ladies! The key to getting results you like is to try different things until you’re completely happy with the results! If you’ve always been conservative with your hairstyles – make little changes. If you’re more daring – go all out!

On my own hair, I’ve tried blond streaks, auburn, carrot-red, black, and my present look. I lived with each look until I got tired of it…and now I think I’m committed. Maybe some of you girls out there who aren’t pouring money into classic cars can afford to go into the beauty parlor and have this done professionally. I’m just trying to keep my 1955 Studebaker on the road, so I save my pennies and color my hair at home.

Perhaps if you’ve never done this before it may seem a little daunting. Not to worry!

Start with little steps.

Invite a friend over who’s done it before. Try a subtler change to “get your feet wet.” Or maybe try doing a small patch of hair – perhaps on the underneth as a starter. Whatever you’re comfortable with. But don’t be afraid to be a little adventurous – it’s only hair after all!

How I Get My Look

After I got a little bored with the red color of my hair, but still really liked it – I decided to add some stripes! Red is known to be a color of dye that really sticks to your hair. So I did the blonde-ing process in small steps.

When I started with streaks, I bleached out the sections of my hair and would pull through the red dye onto it for just the last few minutes of the dying process. This allowed me to go more gradually through the bleaching process – yet because I was pulling through a little bit of the dye it made the bleached area a more consistent color that I could live with.

So for awhile, I had more subtle streaks that varied from just a little bit lighter from the rest of my hair all the way to a copper-ish sort of color. Then eventually I got to the point of going full blonde with the streaks.

Follow along and see the steps I take in coloring my own hair (it’s not a pretty process!)

**more pictures are in progress…its difficult to dye your hair AND take pictures!!**

Step one: I painstakingly section off my hair. You can make sections as big or little as you want. I try to stay very consistent in keeping the blond with the blonde and red with the red. It’s takes a few more minutes to catch all those stow-away strands, but I feel its important.

What I like about where I have things situated is there’s some blond at my face and around my part – and then a bigger, sneaky section in the back which puts some blonde color in the full length of my hair. Depending on how I part my hair, I can make the blond look very prominent around my face or I can make it almost disappear. In the pincurls I most often wear up top, the two colors of my hair swirl together nicely.

Step two: Clip back or cover the sections to be bleached. You can use foil and wrap them all up completely to feel safe. I usually just twirl them tightly and clip them down with a bobby pin or pincurl clip.

Step three: Dye the rest of your hair with whatever color you’re using. I use Feria #666 (I think the name is “Intense Auburn.”) I stopped buying the drugstore boxes as they rarely had my correct color (and they’re more expensive.) I now go to Sally Beauty Supply and just buy the dye bottles separately then use 20 developer with them.

Be patient during the dye process! If you’re in a rush you could end up with splotchy areas because you didn’t fully cover them with dye. And it’s REALLY helpful to have a mirror behind you so you can see what’s going on at the back of your head. Also, be sure to have an old, damp washcloth nearby to wipe off your face/ears/neck that get dye on them.

If you’ve never dyed your hair before – don’t be afraid of it. Fully saturate every strand of hair. If it takes you 30 minutes to apply the dye to your hair – still wait the prescribed time once your hair has been completely saturated. Regular hair dye (excluding bleaches) aren’t going to cause more damage to your hair if they’re on a little longer.

Step Four: Finish the dying process completely. Now on to the sections you had covered or clipped down for bleaching. Before applying the bleach they should be completely dry. You may want to dry all your hair, or just the sections to be bleached – its up to you.

To bleach my hair, I use the packets of powder bleach combined with 40 developer (again, available at Sally Beauty Supply.)It doesn’t seem there’s too much of a difference between brands, I don’t really keep track. It is NOT the bleach you’d use to make your laundry white…please don’t put that on your hair!!

Step Five: Clip the area of your hair back that you just dyed. Pay particular attention to the areas where the dyed part meets up with the part you’re going to bleach. I try to pin down my hair in a way that the freshly dyed area is pulled tightly away from the sections to be bleached. You don’t want to take any chances with the bleach getting brushed on the hair you don’t want bleached!

Step Six: Mix the bleach and apply. Be sure you’re wearing gloves – as bleach will eat at your skin really quickly (I know…its happened to me!) Again, you want to completely saturate the hair to be bleached but not to the point where its so messy that its going to puddle over to a non-bleached section.

Once the bleach has been applied to a section, I just kinda twist it together and clip it out of the way a little – without touching any other hair of course. Some people might like to use a small piece of foil – lay the section on top of it and brush on the bleach solution – then you can just kind of fold it up in the foil as it develops.

Keep an eye on your hair. Once its to a color of your liking, rinse it off!  Pay attention to any directions along with your bleach. You don’t want to leave this stuff on your hair too long – it can do major damage!

I find that there’s no need to cover over my blond with any other “blonde” dye. I just bleach it and leave it like that!

And, wah-lah…new hair! A fun new rockabilly-inspired style is as easy as that! If this sounds too daunting to do by yourself?? Take in one of the pictures and ask your hairstylist to recreate the sectioned off look for you!

Now that the dying is over – onto the funner part…HAIRSTYLES!

A few more things:

  • After I’d bleached my hair for awhile, I found that the red would wash over and contaminate the blonde area making it kind of pink. The reason this happened was because the more I bleach my hair, the more porous the hair becomes. Which means I just need to be extra careful with the red dye. So now I take extra precaution when rinsing the red dye off my hair in step four to be certain all the dye is off…and it usually ends up fine. If I’m not careful, I end up having to re-bleach the blonde section about a week later!



2 Responses to “Dying Hair – Getting the Two-Toned Look”


  1. 1 Lisa Pedersen
    January 6, 2013 at 9:37 pm

    Just wanted to say thanks for taking the time to post this info. I’ve been wanting to go two-toned for awhile, and just can’t bring myself to pay salon prices. Looking forward to more pics.


Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s




Welcome to Grease Girl!

I'm not what you would call your normal grease monkey. I prefer to keep my cuticles trimmed and fingernails red. But when I started driving my 1955 Studebaker Champion I had to get a little greasy! Seeing as I'm more or less new to all this, this blog will be the place to learn along with me. Check back often to see what adventure I'm on next...it'll be fun!

Enter your email address to get the latest GreaseGirl adventure delivered fresh to your email inbox!

Join 273 other followers

Follow Me on Instagram @greasegirl

I'm headed to Speedweek this year!!! After missing out last year, I'm super-duper-excited to be attending for my 4th year...the salt will NEVER get old!

When's the last time you've given your car some lovin'? New post up at GreaseGirl.com!

#1hour if #exercise in...and who's waiting at the #endofthetrail, #benandjerrys. No I won't! Thanks to Pandora's #Monarchy station for helping me #run. Got to get the post-marriage #gettingcomfortable #kindoflikefreshman15 #cookingforaskinnyman weight off

More Photos

Upcoming Events:

Gasoline Gallery - Cali Screamin' 8

California Screamin' 8 - June 22nd - Don the Beachcomber - Huntington Beach, CA

13th Annual Rat Fink Party

13th Annual Rat Fink Reunion - July 26-28th - Acton, CA

Speedweek 2013

Speedweek 2013 - August 10-16th - Bonneville Salt Flats, Utah

Past Stories

Get in Touch!

Throw me a line at kristin@greasegirl.com, I'd love to hear from ya!

Facebook

  • Like GreaseGirl on Facebook!
  • Thanks to Andie at Mosaic Photography for many of the awesome pictures! And thanks to my Dad for his additional skills. All material on Grease Girl is copyright of Kristin Cline (Martin), 2009-2012 and is not to be used elsewhere without her expressed permission.

    Follow

    Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

    Join 273 other followers

    %d bloggers like this: