Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Orangic Henna Update


I used pure organic henna to permanently colour my hair red a couple of months ago. You can read the original post "
Organic Hair Colour - Henna". I am thrilled with it!!

Since that first application I have learned a few things. Here is the sum of the henna knowledge that I have accumulated through research and my own experience.


I found a great source for pure Jamila henna powder, body art quality, summer 2011 crop! It's an EBay store Mehendi911. Her charge for the above is $6, which is the cheapest I have found for summer 2011 crop date. What impressed me was the postage. Postage for one box of 100g is only $3.90 to Canada and she's in California! It's even cheaper to send it to somewhere in the US. I ordered 2 boxes, 100g each and postage was only $4.90! Amazing! I got it in about a week and it was great quality stuff! Exactly what I ordered!

After shopping around for months and being appalled at the postage, or the cost of 2011 crop BAQ henna powder, I was thrilled to find this! I'm going to order from her all the time! The customer service was good too. I had a few questions and she answered them friendly and prompt.

I sleep with the henna on my head and rinse it out in the morning. I keep it on a full 8 hours, which is about as long as there is dye release. After that there is not much left, so you can leave it on longer if convenient without much change. (Sometimes I Iike to sit and have my coffee before I wash it out.) I wrap the muddy head in plastic wrap then cover with a thin toque to hold it all in place and keep it warm, then go to bed.

MOST IMPORT TIP:

1) One very important detail that I think everyone should know before they use henna it this: DO NOT MIX IT WITH LEMON JUICE - even though a lot of people online will tell you to do so.

It is not necessary and the lemon juice will fry your ends, especially if they are already slightly damaged from previous chemicals. I now need to trim about 3" off the ends of my hair. I will do this when it gets to my waist, which I figure should be in about next spring, 2013. In the mean time I keep it braided over my shoulder or, on the rare occasion that I wear it loose and down, the ends curled with sponge rollers or rolling in a scarf or bun. (I NEVER apply heat to my hair!) Henna is very good for your hair and will not damage it. It may even help repair some damage you have and protect it. It bonds with the keratin in the core, making it stronger.

If you mix your henna powder with just water as soon as you get it, then freeze it, you do not need anything else for dye release. The freezing breaks down the cell walls and releases the dye. You will, however, need to apply it as soon as it thaws, as the dye has been released. Don't let it sit and thaw too long before applying it to your hair.

I have bought henna and applied it a second time since that first application and the freezing worked wonderfully, nothing but water added.

2) You might need to do two entire applications. I did my whole head because the damaged ends have always been lighter than the roots growing in, two toned but without a line. It did look like a natural lightening. Everyone's hair is a bit lighter on the ends after a summer in the sun.


You will also get stronger dye with a fresher henna. Try to buy 2011 crop powder. I'm happy with the colour over the entire head, after the second application. It is a bit darker overall, but a beautiful and more even colour.

Remember! Henna will not lighten your hair at all and continued use will darken it. It will make your hair stronger and permanently red. If you are hennaing virgin hair, you may have to apply it twice to get strong and permanent coverage. I have read of some instances where it did not take permanently until applied twice but I don't believe those women were using pure henna. If you buy a box of organic henna hair colour off the drugstore shelf under the name "Lush Henna" or "Coloura" or some such, read the label. It's not pure henna and my not last. Make absolutely certain it is purely organic. Do not buy so called "henna hair colour" that is not labelled specifically 100% organic henna powder. Colouring previously chemically treated hair with a box of so called "henna hair colour" that is not pure 100% henna could give you a colour that is not what you want. I have even read of women getting "frog butt green" hair from doing this. Buy only 100% pure organic henna or a henna/cassia mix.

Better yet, buy pure henna powder for mehandi (body art). It's what the hand and feet body artist use and it's pure henna powder. You can also buy henna powder for hair that is pure but not as finely sifted. It works just as great as the body art quality (BAQ) henna but will be harder to rinse out.


This is my hair after the second overall application. If you look closely you can see that the ends are still lighter than the top of my head but it looks like a natural lightening without a line. This is curling the ends with sponge rollers overnight. The straighter right side is closer to the actual length. Curling makes it shorter. This is in natural light. It looks completely different in different light.

I missed a spot doing the roots the last time, so I just thawed a finger full and applied it there overnight again. Worked great! No way could I have done that with commercial hair dye. The overlap in that spot is a tad darker than the rest, since it was applied in that area a third time, but so slight it is only noticeable by me. Now I know that I will need to use an applicator bottle for roots in the future to keep it on the roots only as much as possible. I have a few of those saved from the commercial hair dye use.

This is a picture of my hair now (below right) indoors, fluorescent light. The top is still slightly damp. The above long picture of uneven hair was only two days ago. The colour has not changed but henna reflects light differently than commercial hair colour. It varies a great deal in different lighting.


3) I have found that mermaiding (dunking the head in water and swishing it back and forth) is the best way to remove the henna. After doing that a few times while massaging head, I then have to rinse and rinse and rinse until it runs clear. When I think I have it all rinsed out, I shampoo and condition and rinse again. That usually gets out most of it. If it feels a little straw like, you still have henna in it.

When I have hennaed my hair, I have not gotten all the henna out until the second wash, days later. There is still a surprising amount of henna left in it until then.
When you truly have all the henna out, your hair will be very soft and manageable. When I say the "henna for hair" is harder to rinse out, now you can understand why that does make a difference. It is cheaper, however, and will give you the same result as long as you get the same pure henna powder 2011 harvest. The only difference is the fineness of the straining.

4) Different sources (locations grown) of henna are slightly different shades of red. Jamila henna will give a more copper and less brown shade, which is what I wanted, so the second time I bought Jamila only. I will continue to use only Jamila for the roots in the future. I have also read that Jamila doesn't get that dark cherry red or browner shade with continued applications, like henna grown in some other locations (Rajasthani, Yemen, Ashfan) but will stay copper. It will, however, continue to darken with further applications, so I will not be applying it to my ends again, just roots henceforth.

5) Henna gives it a bit of a different feel to my hair, heavier sort of, and less able to take a curl, which is ok with me. I don't like the natural wave in my hair and as it gets longer, will be glad that it remains straight.

All in all, it was a successful venture! I love the henna colour and the strength it gives to my hair. I would recommend this to anyone who wanted permanently red hair. Just be warned, it is permanent! I love it!

If you order from Mehendi911, please let her know that I recommended her (Artbysheryl). I won't get anything from it, I don't think, but I would like her to know how happy I am with her prices and service. I told her I was going to recommend her to everyone.


UPDATE: Covering Gray:
Henna colours everything - period. Henna will cover gray but the gray hair will be a different colour than the dark hair. The base colour determines the lightness/brightness of the henna shade. Gray hairs will be a brighter copper than the virgin hair, unless your virgin hair is very blond.

If you are "salt and pepper" the resulting colour will have brighter copper highlights, something I am looking forward to as my natural, partially grayed hair grows out. My hair is more solid because I hennaed on top of an overall commercial hair colour, hiding the gray.

If you have a lot of gray, you may want to do a few overall applications to get the colour darker.

21 comments:

The Japanese Redneck said...

You have beautiful hair.

lol...at 1st I thought you did a self haircut and got it uneven, like a did a couple of months ago.

Sarah said...

Thank you for sharing your knowledge on this. I just ordered 2 boxes from the Ebay seller you listed. Now I just have to remember to cancel my hair appt for this saturday. $6 vs $100 + tip at a salon is amazing! :)
I can't wait til it arrives!

Joyful said...

I've been thinking about henna for some time now. But I've heard that a lot of it just coats the hair rather than permeating it. Do you know if this product has good gray coverage?

Providence Acres Farm said...

I'm posting an update on covering gray now :-)

Providence Acres Farm said...

Just another tip: If you henna your hair and you don't like the feel of it after because it feels damaged or straw like, you have not rinsed it all out yet.

I do this every time, even root touchups. It takes a couple of shampoos for me to get it all out.

The plus is that, once you get the overall colour you want, it's roots only after that.

I love how permanent it is, especially since I am growing my hair very long now and don't want to buy three boxes of colour every time! Nor do I want the damaged ends that go along with continually commercially coloured hair.

Providence Acres Farm said...

Hi Ramona! I have done that before too. I do trim my own hair and sometimes have to keep trimming to get it even! lol!

Should I cut off the bottom of the picture so it's not uneven?

Providence Acres Farm said...

Joyful, henna does permeate the hair. It bonds with the keratin protein in the core making it stronger.

There is only one henna. it stains everything and is red. So called "henna hair colour" is not necessarily pure henna. If you want good coverage for gray, make sure you use 100% pure henna.

www.greenworldbvi.com said...

Wow, you're hear is gorgeous and thick and so long. The red looks so natural too.
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Eugenia Wadsworth Martin said...

Your hair is beautiful I wish mine were so thick. I have very little gray and my mom at 85 has very little. But the color is gorgeous. Will has a thing for redheads. LOL I also whack on my hair can not get Will to do it he's chicken. I also wear it up in the summer.
We are setting our tomatoes seeds this weekend we got from you. The weather pattern has been so warm and we have had a tomato plant from last fall in the plant room we use to over winter my outside plants that has started putting out blooms so we will keep them inside till they are ready to plant.

Providence Acres Farm said...

It has been warm enough to start seed here too! Strange weather here, almost like summer!

Erinn Merlo-Jackson said...

I love this and really want to try it. I ordered from the site you referenced and told her you referred me :). I have a question, how many grams do you use to color your hair. My hair is the same color as your original color and about the same length. I purchased 500 grams. Will I use it all in one application? I'm excited to try this! Thank you for your blog post.

Providence Acres Farm said...

Hi Erinn! You will only need 20 grams to do the whole head, if that much. I only neede about 150 grams to do it all well. Save the rest for a second application and root touchups.

Freeze the leftovers right away. They will be ready for the next use immediately after thawing. It freezes well.

Erinn Merlo-Jackson said...

Thank you so much for your response! I hope you don't mind if I ask you another question (and as I get closer to dying I may ask more) :) ... if I wanted to use henna on my eyebrows, how long would it take to process? The whole 8 hours? Will it stain the skin under and around my eyebrows? I hate when my eyebrows don't match my hair ... lol. Just curious. I would hate to apply it to my face and have huge orange stains over my eyes for a month ;).

Providence Acres Farm said...

Well, I have not done mine yet, but I know from doing my hair that the henna stains around my hairline don't last long, even if left alone. they are very faint and disappear in a day or so. The first time I applied straight Pinesol on a cotton ball and the too it off the skin completely. I immediately washed it off, of course.

I plan to apply it to my eyebrows with a tiny brush, trying to keep it to the eyebrows, this weekend, when I do my roots again. I have read that a piece of tape will cover it for the night and keep it from rubbing off or drying out.

I know it doesn't last long on the eyebrows bu I'm thinking it should be good enough if redone every couple of months or so, when I do the roots.

I'll let you know how it goes ;-)

Erinn Merlo-Jackson said...

Thank you so much for holding my hand into the henna world. If I haven't said so yet, your hair is gorgeous! Thanks again!

Providence Acres Farm said...

Thank you very much, Erinn! and you are very welcome!

Providence Acres Farm said...

I did the eyebrow thing. Brushed it on with a tiny brush exactly where I wanted it. Taped over the entire eyebrow well and went to bed. The tape was still there in the morning.

I realized that pulling the tape off might also pull off the eyebrows so I washed it off. Worked well. The tape just came off in my hand once wet. The eyebrows look great. No coloured skin under or around them.

How long it will last is something I'll just find out as I go along. I will probably redo them often to keep them reddish.

I missed a spot of the roots right on the top of my head.:-( I'll have to touch it up tonight.

Erinn Merlo-Jackson said...

You are the best!!! That is so awesome that the eyebrows worked without staining. I'm going to attempt this in about 2 weeks. I dyed my hair red with a "natural" dye from whole foods last week to make sure I liked it red and I love it! As soon as this washes out (and it looks like it will fast!) I'm going to apply the henna. I will report back to you when I do! Thanks again.

Providence Acres Farm said...

My skin wasn't stained but I didn't get much on my skin. I used a tiny, tiny brush and brushed it on just where I wanted the colour to be. Try to keep it off the skin around the eyebrow.

Erinn Merlo-Jackson said...

I just wanted to stop back in and let you know I did my hair with henna! I'm at day 3 right now and it is still really red, but it looks and feels amazing. I can't believe how silky my hair feels after using the henna. I think I might experiment with adding some indigo to add some brown tones to the red next time I do it. Thank you for all your help! I'm glad I did it :).

Providence Acres Farm said...

I'm so glad it went well for you! Wait a couple of weeks before you decide. It will change colour still. Also you can do it again to get a darker colour.