As someone that has spent the best part of five years trying to transition my naturally brunette strands into a full head of luscious blonde, trust me when I say I understand the perils of bleach appointments. I have tried full-head highlights, half-head highlights, ombré, balayage and babylights in an attempt to get the effortlessly blonde hair of my dreams, but alas, I still haven’t quite got there.
However, I have every faith that 2022 will be the year that my blonde hair dreams will come true. You see, the thing I have struggled with the most is knowing exactly what to ask for at the salon. With prices usually quotes by technique, it doesn’t make it easy for those of us that don’t know what technique is needed. What we do know, is that we want blonde that isn’t blocky, is 3-dimensional and requires minimal fuss. But now there’s a new trend on the rise, and it might just answer my hair prayers.
“Curated blonde is where you customise the final look by using many different techniques for the end result, rather than one set technique. It could be a combination of balayage underneath to give a large panel of colour for texture with fine micro lights at the front to make the front look seamless,” explains Jo McKay, Aveda’s Global Colour Educator. That’s right, colour appointments are set to go bespoke, and it’s a long overdue move.
My top tip? Have a picture as a reference point so that your stylist can decode the sorts of techniques they might have to combine in order to get your bespoke curated blonde finish. “The colourist can recommend how to take care of the colour for condition and shine and can speak with the stylist doing the cut,” says McKay. (FYI, I really recommend Aveda Blonde Revival Shampoo (£23) and Virtue Restorative Treatment Mask (£30) as a health promoting power dup for blonde strands.)