Archive for the ‘Hair tips’ Category

Right-sized curls

Friday, July 18th, 2008

Hot rollers were a mystery to me. I’d try time and time again, but every time I’d end up flat on top with overly springy ends. The effect was unbalanced and a little like the dreaded triangle. All that’s changed now, thanks to a tip from Roxana – start in the middle.

It turns out my fatal error was starting from all the way at the ends and rolling up. By placing the hot roller halfway down the section of hair, the volumizing effect would be more evenly distributed. I curl from the middle to the ends, then roll the rest of the way up to the roots. Voila! My fairly fine hair suddenly has volume – and volume where I want it, at that!Thank you, Roxana. My curls are eternally grateful.

xo,
Sarah Jo  

PS – Roxana is currently on a hair sabbatical.  However, the front desk would be happy to include your name on a waiting list when she does begin scheduling appointments.  Contact either VAIN Downtown or Ballard for more info! 

Tips for professionals with wild hair

Thursday, July 10th, 2008

By VAIN client + special guest VAIN blogger Ariel Meadow Stallings

I’m a marketing manager in my mid-30s. I work on the Eastside in a windowless office where I do stuff like social media campaign strategy (zzz), PR planning (*blink blink*) and mulling the return on investment of corporate communication strategies (yawn!). I go to tech industry conferences and speak about public relations (honk-shooo).

…I also have bright pink hair.

Rear view

Almost three years ago, I made an appointment with my beloved Jenny Slay, who’s been doing my hair ever since I hacked off my rainbow dreadlocks in 2001. In late 2005, my hair was long, straight and medium brown, and I told Jenny “I like it long, but I’m bored with my natural color. But I hate doing root maintenance! I want less boring, but low maintenance.”

Jenny’s solution was to bleach the tips of my hair, and then dye the ends with Special Effects’ Atomic Pink. So, for the last three years, the bottom six inches of my hair has flamingly bright pink.

It’s incongruous, I guess: a 30something professional with pink hair. But honestly, the pink hair fits perfectly into my professional life, and I wish more established professionals would go for wild colors.

Here’s a short list of why:

  • Personal branding, people!
    Bright hair makes you easy to recognize and remember, which is extra awesome at industry events like conferences and networking thangs. It helps you stand out during job interviews. Personal branding is a big deal, and standing out in a crowded workplace is awesome!
  • Gives your coworkers street cred
    My boss told me that he actually bragged to some higher-ups that he has a pink-haired employee, explaining that my weird hair makes him look cooler by proxy. Granted, I work in marketing/pr where such things matter. But everyone wants to feel cool.
  • When you combine wild hair with solid skills and industry authority, you blow people’s minds
    Yes, there are a lot of assumptions about bright hair and immaturity. But when you’re actually good at your job, you can see people’s minds shifting. “You mean … pink hair and 10 years of industry experience can go together? Woah….” I think it’s easier to get away with bright hair if you’re an professional in your 30s or 40s … you’re already established in your industry, and people are forced to respect your experience, even if your hair confuses them.

Despite all this awesomeness, there are definitely a few considerations for professionals thinking of going for bright hair. Here are a few:

People will ask a lot of questions
…and you need to be ready to answer them with graceful articulation. Coworkers will ask you all sorts of silly things (“is that permanent? why do you do that? is upkeep hard?”), and you can’t act like a petulant teenager and huff, “Why can’t they just accept me for who I am?! Why is everybody staring!?” You look different. People are going to ask questions. Deal with it! Think of yourself as a Ambassador of the Funk and answer their questions with patience, tactfulness, and a good natured smile.

Compensate for your weird hair by being hardworking
The best way to get away with being a weird-haired professional is to, well, be really good at your job so that’s what people focus on. You need to be so good at what you do that people are forced into respecting you despite the hair. If you’re more the slacker type who shows up hung-over, then the bright hair may be more of a challenge, because then you’re the scary weirdo with purple hair who smells like gin in the staff meeting. If you have weird hair, you need to to overcompensate a bit with more hardworking awesomeness. The squares with their frosted Rachel cuts can get away with slacking. You, blue-haired assymmetrical bob, probably can’t.

Go for bright hair you can hide
Ok, I’ll admit it. Sometimes, you just need to blend in with the crowd. I had an appearance on The Today Show a few months back to talk about tech issues, and I just knew that if the pink hair was showing it was going to mess with my credibility as a technologist. Thankfully, my pink tips are easy to sweep back into a nice tidy bun — from the front, it’s all business with brown hair and a tidy up-do. From the back, you just see a flash of pink knot. Who even knows if it’s hair? Could be a ribbon or something.

In closing, I leave you all with this video of me answering questions at a PR industry event (zzzz) but look: PINK HAIRED INDUSTRY CREDIBILITY!

In addition to being a pink-haired professional + VAIN client, Ariel Meadow Stallings is a superstar of the blogisphere- check out her Offbeat Bride and Electrolicious blogs to see why.

Change of pace

Tuesday, June 3rd, 2008

Before VAIN, I did some less than ideal things to my hair. The color debacle deserves it’s own post, but it wasn’t just the damage I inflicted with repeated home bleaching. I didn’t know much about product, either. I can picture dragging a comb through wet hair, freshly shampooed with whatever was on sale.

Now, if this sounds like your daily routine, and you’re happy with it, then ignore my tale of transformation. If your hair is healthy, glowing, and strong, there’s no need to make changes. But if you’re baffled by breakage, buildup, and dullness, you might be making the same mistakes I was.

I can’t remember the first time I heard that you didn’t need to wash your hair daily. The idea kind of blew my mind. Wouldn’t my hair just look worse? Didn’t I need to get the ‘dirt’ out to leave my hair shiny and free? I didn’t understand the benefit of the oils our scalp produces naturally; instead, I was stripping everything from my hair on a daily basis.

My first upgrade was to Pureology Hydrate shampoo and conditioner. I needed to try to protect the investment of my gorgeous new color, now that I’d left the world of drugstore boxes behind me. I found that my hair felt much softer and smoother after just a shampoo, and I didn’t need piles of conditioner like I previously had. I obviously paid more than I was accustomed to at $18.95, but after a while I realized that bottle lasted me an entire year. With my fine hair and intermittent shampooing, I realize average usage might be a little more than mine – but I was actually saving money buying fancy-pants products.

As Rebecca has mentioned, we’re a little Kevin-Murphy-happy ’round here. Let me add my own praises! Cheapskate that I am, I ponied up for the full “Kevin Murphy Experience” after hearing Rachel mention it at least 200 times in one week. I got Maxi Wash, Angel Wash, Angel Rinse, and Born Again. I use all four products now, but just once a week. My poor little hairs, after years of flat irons, deserved such pampering.

I’ve never loved my hair so much! With my activity level [read: sedentary] I’m able to wash my and style my hair just once a week. Who knew low maintenance could look so good?

xo,

Sarah Jo

Sick in Bed Hair Tips

Sunday, March 2nd, 2008

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I’m not going to lie to you: it’s been a rough week. I’m on day 5 of the worst flu/cold/mystery bug I know that kid on the plane gave me, and at this point I’ve given up completely on the outdoors and pants that don’t have an elastic waistband. But it hasn’t been a total loss- my hair’s looking pretty good.

For those of you in a similar predicament, please enjoy these sick in bed hair tips to help pass the hours and smooth the cuticle:

1. Deep condition
Shampoo, towel dry, and apply a deep conditioner for 2-20 minutes while you’re watching Judge Judy or DNA tests on Maury or whatever. You know you’ve got the time. VAIN carries a few great options, including my personal fave Osmo Essence’s Intensive Repair Mask (pictured above, $13.95), and BORN.AGAIN from the new Kevin Murphy line that everyone’s raving about ($24.95).

2. Get famous
Go from Typhoid Mary to Mary J in a few clicks of the mouse with InStyle.com’s Hollywood Hair Makeover tool. Lots of fun and might get you thinking about your next new style… if you ever get out of bed.

3. Get dirty
Hair experts all agree that daily shampooing isn’t always best for your hair, so why not give yours a rest from the suds, the styling tools and products, and let its natural oils build back up while you’re stuck at home? Not the most glamorous tip, but your hair will be healthier for it.

Hope you’re feeling healthier soon, too. Even if it means going back to regular pants.

-Rebecca P.

Rainy Weather Hair Tips

Friday, January 25th, 2008

VAIN umbrella

We’ve been enjoying some unusually sunny weather here in Seattle this week, but behind every bright n’ dry day in the 206 there are about a dozen dark and rainy ones. And you know what those can do to a hairdo. So! VAIN staff and stylists to the rescue with tips on how to fight the frizz:

VAIN downtown stylist Janae recommends a light pomade like the Soft Wax by Spice. It starts off with a soft, creamy feel but it keeps hair in place once it dries.

For clients with curly hair, downtown curl queen Liza recommends the Deva Curl line for rainy days and every day. Mist-er Right helps revitalize and refresh weathered hair and/or hat head, and Set It Free spray is a 24-hour moisture lock that adds shine and can be used on all hair types to eliminate frizz.

TT recommends the Davines Invisible Honey Gel for her VAIN downtown clients along with the Deva Curl Set It free to keep naturally textured hair soft throughout the rainy days.

VAIN Ballard pioneer and in-house photog extraordinaire Sarah offers this great and relatable tip: “My own trick is to do a simple french twist updo, but a little bit “undone,” with my bangs pulled back into a faux pompadour. It takes about 5 minutes total, and I always get compliments on it. Usually it’s just hiding a truly disasterous hair day underneath.”

Downtown super-stylist Sharon recommends Ringlet by Redken to her curly-haired clients for a weightless feel and to eliminate frizz. For an on-the-go product, Sharon likes Hemp Texturizing Glaze by Alterna to carry with you and use on damp hair when you come in from out of the rain.

We also got several votes for the great hats we have at both VAIN locations, a couple of “just cut it all off!”s, lots of encouragement to not fight it and just embrace more natural texture, and a classic quote from our ultra-stylish and ever-coiffed VAIN downtown salon assistant Frenchii:

“Lots and lots of Sebastian Mega Shaper hairspray mixed w/ any shine spray. I use pureology shine spray for the hive and the bangs. It gives me a sleek, won’t budge for nothing hair do, then S Factor smoothing lusterizer for the rest…gives dark hair the prettiest my little pony sparkles and tames tangles. And I always wrap my hair in a silk scarf before I go to bed.