Black hair dye can make your hair look artificial and wash out your face if the shade isn't exactly right for you. If you've dyed your hair black and it doesn't look natural, but you want to keep the basic dark color, there are ways to tone down the harshness of the black and make your skin tone richer to compensate. If you haven't yet colored your hair black, choose a shade that is more suitable for your skin tone.
Don't use blue-black, which is the harshest shade of black, if your skin tone clashes with it. Look at your skin in natural light. If you have olive skin, blue-black may suit you and look natural. If you have naturally dark hair, black will appear more natural on you than if you have lighter brown, red or blond hair.
Ask your hairdresser to bleach out an unsuitable black, if you are prepared to tweak the color slightly, and then ask her to dye the hair a very dark brown. The dark brown color will appear black in most light and is the color used by a lot of pale-skinned celebrities who appear to have black hair.
Highlight the hair. Adding very subtle highlights will break up the one-color expanse of black and subtly lighten the hair to a more natural hue. One of the reasons black hair color appears unnatural is that it lacks strands highlighted by the sun that add depth to the color.
Ask a beautician to dye your eyelashes and eyebrows a darker color if they are clashing with your hair. This process will have to be repeated regularly to keep the facial hair the same color as the head hair.
Keep the roots from showing by coloring the roots regularly. Having different color roots will immediately give away your coloring secrets and will look completely unnatural. Follow recoloring instructions on the hair color box if you are self-coloring. If you apply the color to the ends of the hair at the same time as the roots, the roots will appear lighter and the ends can look even darker.
Subtly alter the color of your face by using make-up if the black hair still washes out your face and draws attention to any little flaws. Use foundation and face powder to even out your skin and cover any blemishes. Bronzers and blushers will warm up your skin and reduce the contrast between the dark hair and a pale face. Use sparingly as too much will make your face, instead of your hair, look an unnatural color. Keep your skin looking flawless and the dark hair will simply highlight the clarity of your skin instead of showing off the flaws.
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References
Writer Bio
Jillian O'Keeffe has been a freelance writer since 2009. Her work appears in regional Irish newspapers including "The Connacht Tribune" and the "Sentinel." O'Keeffe has a Master of Arts in journalism from the National University of Ireland, Galway and a Bachelor of Science in microbiology from University College Cork.
Photo Credits
Ice eyes with black hairs image by UBE from Fotolia.com