Wednesday, 17 August 2016

The Best Short Hairstyles and Haircuts to Try Now- 2016 new hair trends

How to contour your face shape with hair colour- 2018 new hair colouring trend!


Forget makeup, hair contouring is the cleverest way to enhance your face shape

If dark colours can make an area look smaller and light shades can open up and widen a space, then you can create illusions to flatter your face shape with colours, not just on your face but your hair too.Hair colour contouring is a technique Art Team Director at Charles Worthington Marc Trinder has developed, and he let us in on the rules.
First you need to identify your face shape correctly. "Pull your hair back and behind your ears", Marc advises, "then looking straight into the mirror ask a friend to draw the shape of your face as they see it" (wipeable pen is advisable!). If your ears are creating the illusion of more width cover them with your hands so you just focus on your face.Match up your sketching to these diagrams below and try Marc's tips to enhance your specific shape.

HEART FACE SHAPE

To create a more oval face shape you want "lighter pieces woven around the 
 jawline and    ears" – this softens the lower part of the face – and "fine light 
 tones with     depth at the roots", says Marc.
Whatever your face shape you also need to take into account your tone. "The wrong colour can make you look drawn and wishy-washy" Marc notes. As well as your hair colour, your skin and eye colours make up your depth and you should try to balance out your cool and warmth with colour.
In the Charles Worthington salons they will hold a 'colour fan' broken into cool and warm tones under your chin to see which shades make you look healthier. "If you put the right colour on someone they're in focus – if not, it's a bit blurry" Marc says. Try it with your clothes in front of the mirror.
Very generally speaking if you're cooler toned you'd suit chocolate browns, creamy blondes or orangey reds. If you have a warmer skin tone you'd better suit chestnut browns, honey blondes and coppery reds.
So whether you want to brighten your complexion or balance your bone structure, hair colour could be your secret weapon.

OVAL FACE SHAPE


SQUARE FACE SHAPE

Marc explains that the oval face shape "is like the hourglass figure" – it's seen as desirable because it's very versatile. Most of you will suit anything, but he recommends talking to your colourist about bespoke colouring to add depth, texture or shine which will all make your features pop.

How to contour your face shape with hair colour- 2016 new hair colouring trend!


Forget makeup, hair contouring is the cleverest way to enhance your face shape

If dark colours can make an area look smaller and light shades can open up and widen a space, then you can create illusions to flatter your face shape with colours, not just on your face but your hair too.Hair colour contouring is a technique Art Team Director at Charles Worthington Marc Trinder has developed, and he let us in on the rules.
First you need to identify your face shape correctly. "Pull your hair back and behind your ears", Marc advises, "then looking straight into the mirror ask a friend to draw the shape of your face as they see it" (wipeable pen is advisable!). If your ears are creating the illusion of more width cover them with your hands so you just focus on your face.Match up your sketching to these diagrams below and try Marc's tips to enhance your specific shape.

HEART FACE SHAPE

To create a more oval face shape you want "lighter pieces woven around the 
 jawline and    ears" – this softens the lower part of the face – and "fine light 
 tones with     depth at the roots", says Marc.
Whatever your face shape you also need to take into account your tone. "The wrong colour can make you look drawn and wishy-washy" Marc notes. As well as your hair colour, your skin and eye colours make up your depth and you should try to balance out your cool and warmth with colour.
In the Charles Worthington salons they will hold a 'colour fan' broken into cool and warm tones under your chin to see which shades make you look healthier. "If you put the right colour on someone they're in focus – if not, it's a bit blurry" Marc says. Try it with your clothes in front of the mirror.
Very generally speaking if you're cooler toned you'd suit chocolate browns, creamy blondes or orangey reds. If you have a warmer skin tone you'd better suit chestnut browns, honey blondes and coppery reds.
So whether you want to brighten your complexion or balance your bone structure, hair colour could be your secret weapon.

OVAL FACE SHAPE


SQUARE FACE SHAPE

Marc explains that the oval face shape "is like the hourglass figure" – it's seen as desirable because it's very versatile. Most of you will suit anything, but he recommends talking to your colourist about bespoke colouring to add depth, texture or shine which will all make your features pop.