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  2. 20 Ways to Rock Ash Blonde Highlights Right Now - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/20-ways-rock-ash-blonde...

    Whether you have naturally blonde hair or you're ready to brighten up your brunette locks, adding highlights is a great way to elevate your look. Now, there are plenty of trendy shades out there ...

  3. How to Go From Brown to Blonde Hair Without Frying It ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/brown-blonde-hair-without-frying...

    Other ways to go blonde involve getting partial or full highlights, balayage or ombré, all of which use bleach to lighten up darker strands, but rather than being applied all over your head from ...

  4. No Bleach! Highlight Blonde, Red or Brunette Locks With This ...

    www.aol.com/entertainment/no-bleach-highlight...

    It’s hard enough getting those beautiful, beachy highlights when you’re already blonde, but the t. ... If you’ve bleached your hair before, you know it can wreak total havoc on your head ...

  5. Hair highlighting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hair_highlighting

    There are four basic types of highlights: foil highlights, hair painting, frosting, and chunking. Highlights can be any color, as long as it is a lighter level than the surrounding hair. Hair lightened with bleach or permanent color will be permanent until new growth begins to show. Highlighted hair can make the hair appear fuller.

  6. List of hairstyles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_hairstyles

    The hair on the sides and back of the head is usually tapered short, semi-short or medium. Curtained hair: Curtained hair is the term given to the hairstyle featuring a long fringe divided in either a middle parting or a side parting. The hairstyle was popular on adolescents and men from the late 1980s until the mid-1990s.

  7. Human hair color - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_hair_color

    The Fischer–Saller scale, named after Eugen Fischer and Karl Saller is used in physical anthropology and medicine to determine the shades of hair color. The scale uses the following designations: A (very light blond), B to E (light blond), F to L (), M to O (dark blond), P to T (light brown to brown), U to Y (dark brown to black) and Roman numerals I to IV and V to VI (red-blond).