3/13/2023 0 Comments Madison reed hair colorMadison Reed is an at-home hair coloring product named for the founder's daughter that claims it’s “free of ammonia, parabens, resorcinol, PPD, phthalates, and gluten.” I’ll confess, aside from gluten, I have no idea what any of that is or why I should be concerned about it, but I figure fewer chemicals can’t be a bad thing? In any case, this is the selling point that caught my eye: “results in multi-dimensional color that looks beautiful, healthy and natural.” Plus Madison Reed says it includes keratin, argan oil, and ginseng root extract, all things my coily, low-porosity, fine-strand, low-density hair loves. And I was at home, so if it turned out badly who would know but me, my mirror, and my S.O.? This time, however, I decided to try something new, as I had seen good reviews and the photos of the color coverage looked great. I am not an impulse buyer or hair-product junkie-once I find what works, I generally stick with that. Still, while doom-scrolling through my social feeds, I kept seeing posts and ads and recommendations for a different at-home dye: Madison Reed hair color. The world being in chaos was no reason to let my gray roots run amok. When the pandemic sent most of us to the house to hunker down for 2020, I immediately ordered several boxes of the L'Oreal Creme Excellence hair color (in 6R Light Auburn) that I normally use when doing my own hair. I’ve mostly had my color done professionally at salons, but I also made sure I knew how to do it myself for those times when my coins didn’t align with my vanity requirements. I’ve dyed my hair for so long I’m not sure what my natural color is, but early on I settled on auburn-y brownish reds, as I like the vibrancy of the shade as well as how it looks next to my brown skin. I started graying at 16 and began coloring my hair while in college.
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