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Henna for Hair


Henna has been used to color hair for centuries just as mehendi has been. Henna comes from the dried leaves of the Egyptian private Lawsonia alba. Henna is a coating dye that means it stains the cuticle layer of the hair. Colour fades eventually so subsequent applications are required every six to eight weeks to intensify tone and condition. Hair cannot be mitigated with Henna and is not usually suitable for hair with more than twenty per cent grey, or hair that is bleached or highlighted.

Using henna for the hair is part of the normal beauty regime in these countries. Henna while coloring the hair conditions it as well. Henna is regarded a very good natural conditioner for the hair. Henna strengthens the hair. It has anti fungal aristocracies which help in the reduction of dandruff.

Once you use henna on your hair it is easier to detangle and your hair is more administrable. Henna is a natural dye and henna dyes your hair a beautiful and natural red. Henna cannot and does not lighten hair. On dark hair henna gives red and reddish highlights. When henna is applied on black or dark brown hair, the hair will be dyed auburn to burgundy with red highlights which will be lighten in the sunlight.

Henna will dye blond hair a natural red. Henna on red hair will make the hair a deeper red. Henna does not have a long shelf life. Don't buy it and then keep it round forever - it will lose its effectuality. Henna will dye white hair a natural red or a deep red. Other great thing about using henna is which you can make a paste to match your hair type. Many people who are anxious about their hair becoming dry add special essential oils to their henna paste. People add floral water, eggs and other natural dyes to their pastes in order to give the perfect paste.

Henna won't entirely change the color of your hair. It will make it red but the color is more of a transparency over your hair.  If you have blond hair then you will end up with a visible carrot top-fiery red. Many women consider the preparation of henna to be a ritual. The plant-based dye looks like a green powder, and has a bizarre fragrance, kind of like hay. The odor goes away in a day or so. Put a cream or oil around your hairline to keep the henna from coloring your ears and forehead.

How to apply henna?

  • Mix wanted quantity of henna according to your hairlength with black coffee, red wine, olive oil, bit of lemon juice and boiled tea water.
  • Apply it on your hair the next day.
  • Start at the top. Apply henna just to the roots and skin closest to the partition of hair.
  • Apply more henna to the length of the hair as you are wrapping it.
  • Now take another thin partition of hair closest to the first partition winding around it but in opposite direction.
  • Begin with the roots, and apply to the remaining length of hair as you are winding it.
  • Then wrap it all with a shower hood to prevent tainting your bed. And go to sleep.
  • When you wake up, you'll find that the henna has become more like a mud helmet.

 

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