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Frugal tip: Stop dyeing your hair

Posted Sep 24 2009, 12:57 PM by Karen Datko
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We have decided not to dye our hair again, and all of our women friends have an opinion about it.

Strong opinions -- ranging from enthusiastic support to this comment from an older friend: "If you go gray, you will be a granola. Still interesting to me -- but invisible to others. Don't do it -- savor your youth!"

That comment nearly stopped us in our tracks, but we're going ahead with this. It's not just the expense -- we color at home once a month for about $8.50, but if you have it done professionally, it's $40, $75 or even more depending on where you live. It's also the time, the handling of harsh chemicals (get that stuff in your eyes and you can go blind), the damage to our hair -- and the suspicion that we're denying the realities of age in a way that's not healthy or helpful.

At some point, this charade has to stop (I'm nearly 55), so why not now? (Plus, it's not like losing a limb. If we don't like what we see, we can always dye it again.)

What's the best way to proceed?

  • Growing it out slowly, with lots of hair cuts. "I looked rather like a raccoon at times ... but I knew I would be rewarded with not having to douse or have my head doused in noxious chemicals every month," Cate wrote at 43Things. It took 14 months.
  • "MissLoretta" took a more drastic approach, she wrote at the same site, getting her dyed-blond hair cut short, and then really short when her natural brown had grown out about 1½ inches.
  • Or you can dye it close to the natural color so roots won't show as it grows out. If your real color is white, getting blond highlights is often recommended.

We've chosen the quick route and got our hair cut short the other day. When the roots -- they are snow white -- are about an inch long, it's back to the shop for a trim. Bye-bye, dark brown.

Invisible? Maybe, but in plenty of fine company. We found many stories online about women who've left the large ranks of those who color their hair. A 2005 survey found that 65% of women had applied hair color in the previous 12 months.

Check out Rose Reed, whose hair is now white and short and lovely. "Oh my goodness, what a difference a dye makes!" she wrote at More.com. "Seriously, this was truly a no-brainer, and I am sorry it took me so long to figure it out."

Andrea Dickson made the decision last year, and she's much younger than us. "Anyway, this time I am sticking with the gray, both for the sake of saving $75 every three weeks, and also to be free from the tyranny of having to constantly alter so much of my appearance to suit society's needs," she wrote at our partner blog Wise Bread. (Beauty tip: She says that maintaining your eyebrows becomes more important when you go gray.)

What do you think? Is the time and expense of dyeing your hair worth it or are you ready to see how you look and feel with your natural color?

Related reading:

I'd rather be a brunette: Tips to save on hair care

How to sell your hair for cash

Frugal confession: I cut my own hair

Comments

 

Another trick you can use is, to use henna for a few months and when you think the orininally dyed hair has grown out, get a short haircut and late the henna fade.

Henna is essentially a "hair paint" not a dye, so it fades in about 8-10 weeks. It can only darken your hair, iit comes in different colors from black to brown to red.

In addition henna is a great conditioner, leaving your hair shiny and full.

Look for pre-mixed henna-based dyes, powders are hard to apply.

tried dying mine one time and decided it wasn't worth the effort-my granddaughter thinks I'm gorgeous so what else could I ask for!  native texan

Thanks, Elena. I'm going to give that some thought.

At 63, I color my hair at home about every 6-7 weeks.  I started coloring my hair a few years back because the gray that was coming in was (and is) a very mousy, yucky yellow (my natural hair color is almost blue black).  Very unattractive.  End result: I cover my gray inexpensively and end up with a really face brightening dark auburn hair color.  I continue to get compliments on my "natural" looking hair color..Go figure!  P. J.

I hate the grays so I will continue to dye.  I guess you can call me vain but I am only 39 not 40 till april 2010.  I have used the dyes for the health food store but they don't cover as well.

My natural hair color is ash blond, now with lots of silver and one large streak of pure white. I get my hair 'highlighted' in shades of blonde and it is very expensive. However, I think I'm worth it because it gives my hair body it wouldn't otherwise have, and it give me an attitude boost when I look in the mirror. I have thought about switching over to shades of silver, but I don't think the time is right yet.

But, if I had the beautiful silver hair one of my coworkers sports, I 'go gray' in a heartbeat.

I'm 28- my sister and I started going gray when we were 12 (yes, 12).  I refuse to stop dyeing my hair- I have, however, cut back on trips to the salon and do my own roots for 2 months then get it done professionally the 3rd month (so that everything is evened out)- if it's going to be fake, it better look real or don't bother! :)

I started coloring my hair when I got the salt-and-pepper look and chose a brown shade very close to my own, using a semi-permanent color (Natural Instincts) that fades gradually and doesn't show roots as much. Since my hair is shoulder length, I just take a tablespoon of liquid out of each of the two bottles, mix it in a bowl, and then apply it first to the front grays - whatever is left goes on the rest of the hair. The remaining dye can be saved as long as you don't mix it till you're ready to color. This way I get about 4 uses out of each box of color, which is about two months' worth for roughly $7. How does it look? Well, last year my colleagues took up a collection for a 60th birthday bash for me and several people said, "NO WAY is she gonna be 60!"  :-)

I colored my hair (myself) for many many years, because I started graying quite early - I'm now 52. I stopped dyeing it 15 years ago, and I've received many compliments on the "gutsiness" of my decision. From my experience, it seems African-American women are much more comfortable going gray naturally than their Caucasian counterparts. Go figure.

Not me!. If it's frugality you want you can do what I do and buy Balsam hair color at Dollar General for only $3.00. It works just as well as the others.( Nice n easy I used all my life and I'm all "split ends" because of it.)

It is bad enough looking old already so I'm not going to make it worse. Because of all the actresses,etc. that can afford plastic surgery WE are expected to look young (even when we are old) now. But I do have one problem - just what DO you do about your eyebrows when part of them are turning gray?

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