Mature Hair
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Mature Hair
by Sophia Brigstock
Updated on May 9, 2021
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For a fabulous woman over fifty it can be difficult to see the external aging processes while your youthful spirit stays intact. Whether a few gray hairs are sprouting or you’ve gone full silver, choosing the hair color for women over 50 that embraces your new stage in life while still showcasing your timelessness can be a challenge. If you’ve found yourself at the end of the search with nothing that really appeals to you, don’t lose hope. We’ve rounded up twenty shades that you can tote with you to your next salon appointment.
When searching for the best hair color for a 50 year old woman , the ideal one is the shade you feel most comfortable with. You may see that you want to return to your original hue, however, for brunettes this can be difficult to maintain. If you’re up for frequent root touch-ups, this bronze shade will warm up your complexion flatteringly.
As you find yourself getting older, embracing the changes that come with it, like graying locks, may not be so easy. However, with a modern gray balayage that blends natural grays with a color from the box, you get a current hairstyle you will be proud to rock.
Blonde is a common choice for aging women to adopt. As gray begins to grow in over time, a low contrast dye job allows you to go longer between the color appointments. Identifying the ideal undertone is key to making this color work for you.
A balayage hair color isn’t just for the younger crowd, it can be a great hair color for women over 50, too. Looking through a ton of inspirational pictures can ensure you are satisfied with your stylist’s job.
An inverted cut is a fab style to combine with youthful highlights. Babylights add in subtle dimension and definition without looking overdone. Opt for a shade that accentuates your skin tone.
When choosing the best hair color for over 50, take into account how much white hair you have and your original hair shade. A red hair color works great for natural medium brown hair (that begs for some brightness) and green or blue eyes.
Fair skin, blue eyes and blonde hair combine well. When considering a shade for pale skin, assess your skin’s undertone. This brightened blonde is soft and blends a warmer honey hue at the roots with cool white highlights to flatter a cool-toned skin and give it an anti-age effect.
A beautifully blended bronde complements all skin tones. Mixing warm and cool shades in one color, such as caramel and ash blonde, is a popular approach in modern dye jobs.
Swooping layers and a flawless blow out elevate hairstyles at any age. The caramel blonde and white create a breathtaking combo that oozes warmth and a sun-kissed glow.
Many older women gravitate towards short chops for maintenance reasons. Getting older doesn’t mean you need to sacrifice your length, as long as your tresses are taken care of. Employing a haircare routine that replaces lost lipids and moisture will support the health of your hair.
Hair color and styles for women over 50 are diverse and customized to the wearer’s face shape, skin tone, hair type, and life style. Requesting a lob with face framing layers can liven up your hairstyle while giving it a youthful edge.
A punk vibe is an option for the mature age. It results in a current sassy look that characterizes you as an active and fun-loving personality. An uneven tapered pixie cut is a great match for a bold color choice.
Gray hair can appear washed out and dull. Ensuring your hair color is rich and saturated will keep your look from appearing aged. Once colored, prevent fading by using a sulfate-free hair care system.
A lot of dimension in a hair color for women over 50 creates a young and exquisite feel. Opting for a color similar to your gray can help to cut down on maintenance appointments and costs.
Mixing up your color with interesting hues can brighten an otherwise unimaginative color. Choosing coloration that matches your skin’s undertone makes the difference between an out-of-place looking style and the one that flatters and stands out.
If you are a brunette, transitioning to a lighter shade like blonde can be hard on your hair. One way to achieve lightness while preventing damage is opting for a darker base and brighter highlights. The light-colored strands will cause hair to appear blonder without much chemical intervention.
Being lucky enough to have the rare ginger hair color from nature, you might find yourself disappointed as your new silver hairs begin to grow in. Nevertheless, an option still exists. Choose something bright and bold. A professional stylist will help you find your perfect shade.
Silver hair is a trend not only for more mature ladies, but young women, too. Acquiring this look for brunette hair would require bleaching sessions to strip color first and apply a silver dye next. For those with graying hair, adding dimension with highlights and lowlights is the ideal option.
You might have found your ideal cut by trial and error, but never underestimate the power of hair color. For over 50s ideas offer today some stunning choices that let you embrace the gray or exchange it for one of many modern metallic blonde shades.
Adding a pastel or neon tint to your hairstyle can be the perfect way to project uniqueness. Let it be one chunky piece. It’s a relatively new approach that makes your hairdo current and bold.
When looking for the right hair color for women over 50, it may feel like you are limited. However, you shouldn’t be afraid to get out of the box by adding unique colors, fresh highlights, or implementing a balayage. Take time to research and find the perfect inspirational pictures for yourself!
Get hair style inspiration. No matter what your hair type is, we can help you to find the right hairstyles
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Home Beauty Aging Hair: Dealing With Increased Frizz
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Not to add fuel to the fear-of-aging-fire, but concentrating only on your skin may not be the holy grail of youth.
Hair goes through its own unwelcome transformation as the years pass, and while grays are the most obvious sign of aging hair, evidence shows that individual strands also change in texture. Yes, your previously smooth-growing strands may start to emerge from your scalp in a more wavy and kinky way.
Seriously, what’s next on the aging agenda?
A study found a statistically significant increase in individual hair curvature between ages ten to 60, which also leads to a loss of luster and smoothness. Put plainly, you could expect your hair to become frizzier and less shiny, usually starting around your fourth decade. “It’s unclear why this happens,” says Jeni Thomas, senior scientist at Procter & Gamble. “This is one of the age-related hair changes that is least understood, although studies indicate the change does happen.” While the study focused on Japanese women, Thomas says the results suggest that these unwelcome changes can affect all ethnicities.
Any woman who is suddenly plagued by renegade flyaways that are rough to the touch would agree.
This whole new growth pattern situation, paired with the fact that the natural production of scalp oils decreases every year, can lead to un-pretty results for your head. But enough with the bad-news-bears stuff, all anyone wants to know is how to fight the frizz. Thomas says it’s all about moisture. “Without hair’s natural oils, it can feel rough and dry and more prone to damage. Cut down on damaging styling habits like flat-ironing and chemical treatments, and use conditioners as far up the hair fiber as you can,” she says.
Frederic Fekkai stylist Anthony Sorensen, who tends to the hair of the ultimate grand dame Martha Stewart, says the key is to restore and retain moisture so hair looks and feels more soft and smooth. “Anti-aging” hair products may sound like BS, but legit ones like the Pantene Expert Collection Age Defy line are formulated to provide hydration and protection without weighing hair down. “Avoid anything that’s high in ammonia and alcohol because those ingredients are drying, and instead look for products with moisturizing ingredients such as olive oil,” says Sorensen. Make friends with masks and leave-in conditioners, and be sure to apply moisturizing products before heat styling.
According to her trusty stylist, Ms. Martha thinks the Fekkai Salon Technician line is a good thing because it hydrates and prevents brassiness, whether you’re gray or you’ve colored your hair. Speaking of dye, Sorensen says that going darker can be conditioning for the hair, but lighter shades and highlights can be quite drying, so keep that in mind before committing to a blonde lifestyle.
With increased kinks and frizz, even the straightest of hair becomes less manageable and you’ll find that it doesn’t lay the same way as it did in your youth. Wash-and-go gals might have to tweak their styling regimen to include smoothing blowouts and more volume at the roots to mask the “puffiness” that comes with irregular texture. But all hope is not lost. With a bit of effort you’ll find that gorgeous, healthy hair isn’t only for recent college grads—think Julianne Moore, Brooke Shields and Courteney Cox, who aren’t Hollywood ingénues but have the kind of hair every woman covets.
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Sha'Carri Richardson Wins Even While Running in Stilettos (Nails)
Selena Gomez's Latest Manicure Color Is Such a 2010s Throwback
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Sha'Carri Richardson Wins Even While Running in Stilettos (Nails)
Selena Gomez's Latest Manicure Color Is Such a 2010s Throwback
Each Zodiac Sign's Unique Personality Traits
Sha'Carri Richardson Wins Even While Running in Stilettos (Nails)
Selena Gomez's Latest Manicure Color Is Such a 2010s Throwback
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Selena Gomez's Latest Manicure Color Is Such a 2010s Throwback
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Sha'Carri Richardson Wins Even While Running in Stilettos (Nails)
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Hayley MacMillen is the former digital wellness editor of Allure , where she oversaw the launch of the website's wellness vertical in 2017. She previously held roles at Cosmopolitan and Refinery29, and is now an associate attorney in California after graduating Berkeley Law School in 2021.
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It’s likely that you have, at some point, removed some — perhaps even all — of your pubic hair. A nationally representative 2016 study out of the University of California, San Francisco found that nearly 84 percent of the 3,316 women surveyed had groomed their pubic hair, and 62 percent had removed it all at least once. Shaving with a nonelectric razor was the most popular method of grooming, followed by trimming with scissors and shaving with an electric razor.
Of course, grooming doesn’t exist in a vacuum, and individuals have long made their follicular decisions according to trends. Even the current natural-is-beautiful, pro-body-hair movement is a cultural product (and one that tends to focus on the hair of cis white women , at that). Women and femmes are far from a monolith, however. Beauty standards interact with gender identity, race, sexuality, relationships, and, yes, simple convenience to influence how we approach our pubes.
As the summer season of greater exposure approaches, Allure is exploring five women’s diverse relationships with their pubic hair — and featuring original photographs of them and their hair, or lack thereof. The women’s overriding sentiment: I do what works for me; to each their own . And while ultimately we may not be able to separate our bush-care choices from beauty ideals, we can stop attaching moral judgments to pubic hair. Ahead, NSFW portraits and uncensored thoughts on the hair down there.
I don’t remember the exact age [I started shaving], but like middle school, I think, just seeing other girls do and it just being like, Oh, well, OK, I guess I’m gonna do it, too .
I’m a hairy person, but I’ve gone most of my life shaving most of my body hair just because there was this idea that I need to that I dealt with for a long time. And so I kind of just woke up one day and...it started off with my legs, and I was like, Why am I doing this? I don’t want really want to, so let me just see how long I can go with not shaving my legs and seeing if it bothers anybody , and no one ever said anything. So then I was [like], OK, so then, if I can apply this to my body hair on my legs, what about my bush? I’ve experimented over the years: I’ve shaved it off completely, I’ve trimmed, but this is the first time that I’m just letting it be completely. I feel really good about it. It makes me feel sexy, it makes me feel affirmed; I don’t know, I think it’s cute, I like it.
In the last few years, [with] this whole body positivity and body hair appreciation movement, I’m noticing who is not included. Especially being a black person, a person of color, it’s very obvious to me when people from my community are not present in things. So people being able to reclaim their body hair, that’s cool, but when it’s only light-skinned white girls who have, like, three, blonde hairs on their entire body, that sends a very strong message.
With this whole body positivity and body hair appreciation movement, I’m noticing who is not included.
To me, it just felt really important to do this [shoot] because I really wish I could have had some visibility as far as a hairy, dark-skinned person. Even within the movement, I feel like it’s more looked down upon that we show our hair because the hair is different, too. It’s not straight, it’s not blonde, you can’t really hide it, it’s there. The journey of my hair on my head, too, going from getting perms my entire life and then cutting it off to a half-inch when I was 17 and now letting it be wild and curly — this is how it grows out of my head — that’s also helped me feel better about body hair in general, because I’m like, This is how I want to look . And that’s really powerful, too.
I’m a queer person who has dated men, [and] I’ve really only had one partner that’s ever really commented on [my pubic hair].... It was one of the first times we were hanging out, and I didn’t tell [him] beforehand [that I let it grow] because I don’t really think it’s a big deal. They were kind of like, “Oh! You’re hairy!” and I’m like, “Yeah, I am!"... They were kind of surprised, I guess, because they were expecting me to not have any hair..., I’ve noticed just in general [with] the women and gender-nonconforming people I’ve dated, hair hasn’t really been an issue.
[As for how I see my partners,] it’s not really my place to police how other people maintain body hair and body image. Do your thing. I don’t necessarily think everyone should go natural or everyone should shave, I’m like, Whatever fits your body . I have friends who do have bush maintenance, and they do wax, and they do shave and that works for them, and I’m like, Yo, more power to you . So as far as grooming, I do still get my eyebrows waxed and shave my armpits. But other than that, everything is kept natural.
I am a non-monogamous person and have several partners and have for several years, and I think that maybe makes me feel more of my own agency about any kind of upkeep or how I want my pubic hair to be or how I want my body hair to be. None of my partners have ever expressed any preferences to me, which maybe is because I select for people who have that point of view in the world. But the fact that there are multiple people...makes me feel extra
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