The world of beauty has recently become notorious for promoting the aesthetic of sameness: the same body type, gleaming length of hair, and skin that looks too taut and too smooth to have been touched by the ravages of time. It seems, though, that we’re finally moving away from that moment (call it the anti-AI movement)—and for many, hair is leading the charge.
More women than ever are bidding adieu to harsh dyes, and instead, they’re blending their grays to work with their previous natural hair color. “Gray blending shifts the conversation from hiding to working with what you have,” says hairstylist Vipul Chudasama, “In my experience, clients today are not asking, ‘How do I cover this?’ but rather, ‘How do I make this look natural and beautiful?’”
“Gray hair has always been a ‘problem’ women were expected to correct, usually with full-coverage dye that erased every silver strand,” says Sonia Presswala of Looks Salon. “The gray blending technique integrates silver strands with highlights, lowlights, or tonal glosses, allowing them to coexist with the dyed sections.”
Presswala adds that the majority of clients actively embracing their natural gray are still in their 40s and 50s, mostly women tired of the constant root-touch-up cycle. But Florian Hurel, who owns a salon that bears his name, says that even women in their 20s and 30s are embracing this shift. “For many of them, it comes from a place of confidence and a slightly rebellious mindset,” he says. “A feeling that they don’t want to be tied to the cycle of constant coloring, recoloring, or using chemicals on their hair so early on.”
How to gray blend
For someone transitioning from dyed hair to their natural grays, the focus is on softening the line between previously colored hair and new growth. When grays look unnatural, it is often because there is a strong line of demarcation between old color and new growth or because the tone appears dull rather than reflective. “Gray blending requires thoughtful color placement,” says Swati Gupta of Bodycraft Salon. “Stylists often add white-toned highlights, soft lowlights, or translucent gray tones to give the color depth instead of making it look flat. The idea is to create a blend where the grays sit naturally within the rest of the hair.”
What is often underestimated is the complexity of the process. “It’s rarely an overnight transformation; sometimes the hair would need to be lightened several levels to match the gray tone, which is not always easy or advisable. Because of that, the process often involves gradual blending techniques that allow the hair to grow out naturally while reducing the contrast,” adds Gupta.
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