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Prepare to Dye
By James Whittall
I used to believe that men should age with dignity, not with dye. That is, until I realized I was the only 38-year-old guy I knew whose hair is almost entirely white. (My father went grey at about the same age, so I blame him for my bum genes.)
At first, the extra snow was a bit of a novelty. But about a month ago, I started to notice that kids were calling me "sir" and not "dude;" salespeople were showing me golf clothing rather than flaming dragon Hawaiian shirts; and my financial advisor was bugging me to buy into burial plots as a sound investment choice "for people our age." He's 54.
So I did it. I washed that grey right out of my hair.
Or, more precisely, I mixed dye intermediates and preformed dyes with a hydrogen peroxide solution, squeezed the glop onto my scalp, worked it into a dark brown lather, waited five minutes, rinsed, shampooed, rinsed again, and towel dried the grey right out of my hair.
No Stranger to Dye
I'm no stranger to hair dye. In my university days, back in the ultraconservative dress-for-success Eighties, I was the only Ottawa U English Department student with a leopard-spotted Mohawk. It was one of many vivid styles that bemused my professors and horrified my parents: in turn, my hair was black, blue, orange, two-tone black and blond, and (result of one failed experiment) the most appalling shade of urine yellow anyone is ever likely to see.
Back then, I had to settle for women's home coloring formulas — damn nasty stuff in girly packages; smelled like freshly tarred highway. Today, thankfully, there is a glut of new men's products on the market, available in shades for just about every natural tone.
And most men's hair color products don't stink like Los Angeles smog. They tend to apply easily and mess is minimal. Unless you're me, in which case you'll need a new wardrobe by the time you're done. But that's another story.
How Hair Dyes Work
Hair dyes, whether for men or women, are available as permanent, semi-permanent, and temporary color products. Permanent hair dyes, the most popular choice among consumers, come in two categories: oxidation and progressive.
Oxidation hair dyes consist of 1) dye intermediates and preformed dyes in an ammoniacal solution that also contains soap, detergents, and conditioning agents; and 2) hydrogen peroxide in water or a cream lotion. The ammoniacal dye solution and hydrogen peroxide solution are mixed shortly before application. The applied mixture causes hair to swell, whereupon the dye intermediates and preformed dyes penetrate the hair shaft, chemically react with each other and the hydrogen peroxide, and dye the hair.
Progressive hair dyes contain lead acetate or, less commonly, bismuth citrate as the active ingredient. Progressive hair dyes gradually change the color of hair by reacting with the sulfur of hair keratin, and also by oxidizing on the hair surface.
You should be aware that there is some question about the use of lead acetate in progressive dyes. Various researchers worry about the danger of lead contamination to users and their children, while professional colorists say lead-based dyes can cause scalp burns if oxidation dyes are later applied to treated hair.
As of this writing, lead acetate is approved in small concentrations (typically, 0.06 percent) for coloring hair on the scalp.
What Are Your Options?
Now that you know all there is to know about permanent hair color, how does this affect your purchasing decision? Well, that really depends on how you feel about progressive dyes. Use this chart as a product selection guide.
Copyright ® Menessentials Corporation. All rights reserved.
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