Haircoloring

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Across
  1. 2. System that colorists use to determine the lightness or darkness of a hair color.
  2. 7. Predominant tone of a color.
  3. 8. Common way to describe a haircolor service that adds shine and color to the hair.
  4. 9. Professional, salon industry term referring to artificial hairlcolor products and services.
  5. 10. Colors prepared by combining permanent haircolor, hydrogen peroxide, and shampoo.
  6. 11. Also known as two-step coloring; a coloring technique requiring two seperate procedures in which the hair is prelightened before the depositing color is applied to the hair.
  7. 12. Highlighting technique that involves coloring selected strands of hair by slicing or weaving out sections, placing them on foil or plastic wrap, applying lightener or permanent haircolor, and then sealing them in the foil or plastic wrap.
  8. 14. A primary and secondary color positioned directly opposite each other on the color wheel.
  9. 15. contain small, uncolored dyes that combine with hydrogen peroxide to form larger, permanent dye molecules withing the cortex
  10. 17. chemical compounds that lighten hair by dispersing, dissolving and decolorizing the natural hair pigment
  11. 18. Used to recondition damaged, overly porous hair, and equalize porosity so that the hair accept sthe color evenly from strand to strand and scalp to ends.
  12. 20. Equalize porosity and deposit color in one application to provide a uniform contributing pigment on prelightened hair.
  13. 24. Also known as bleaching or decolorizing; chemical process involving the diffusion of the natural hair color pigment or artificial haircolor from the hair.
  14. 26. Visible line separating colored hair from new growth.
  15. 27. A nonammonia color that adds shine and tone to the hair.
  16. 28. aka: boosters, protinators, or accelerators; powdered persulfate salts added to haircolor to incarease its lightening ability
  17. 29. Also known as oxidizing agents or catalysts; when mixed with an oxidation haircolor, supplies the necessary oxygen gas to develop color molecules and create a change in hair color.
Down
  1. 1. aka: free-form technique; painting a lightener (usually a powdered off-the-scalp lightener) directly onto clean, styled hair.
  2. 3. System for understanding color relationships.
  3. 4. Combination of natural hair color that contains both pheomelanin and eumelanin.
  4. 5. Also known as gradual haircolors; haircolors containing metal salts that change hair color gradually by progressive buildup and exposure to air creating a dull, metallic appearance.
  5. 6. Also called no-lift, deposit-only color. Formulated to deposit, but not life (lighten) natural hair color. Demipermanent colors are able to deposit without lifting because they are less alkaline than permanent colors and are mixed with a low-volume developer.
  6. 10. Oxidizing agent that, when mixed with an oxidation haircolor, supplies the necessary oxygen gas to develop the color molecules and create a change in natural hair color
  7. 13. Also known as undertone; the varying degrees of warmth exposed during a permanent color or lightening process.
  8. 16. The strength of a color
  9. 19. aka vegetable haircolors; colors, such as henna, obtained from the leaves or bark of plants.
  10. 21. Coloring some of the hair stands lighter that the natural color to add the illusion of sheen and depth.
  11. 22. Used to equalize porosity
  12. 23. Lightening technique that involves pulling clean, dry strands of hair through a perforated cap with a thin plastic or metal hook, and then combing them to remove tangles.
  13. 25. the unit of measurement used to identify the lightness or darkness of a color