Friday, August 25, 2017

Photoshop is Real

My sister once asked me a very complicated question: "Is Photoshop real?" I opened my mouth to answer but I felt as though I'd been slapped in the face. Is Photoshop... real? How does someone answer that??

Well sadly, the answer is yes. And its something stylists struggle with on a daily basis. Don't get me wrong- Pinterest is amazing. But I know I speak for a vast majority of stylists when I say we also HATE it. We hate it from the bottom of our fiery, passionate guts. Why?  For one very obvious reason. 



Photoshop is alive and well, and its killing us. Too often are we plagued with these false images and the bar of magical hair expectations is set a little higher. Now don't get me wrong here- I absolutely love fashion colors. It's my favorite thing to do. But when someone sends a photoshopped photo to me my insides writhe and I'm so disappointed. Not in my client, mind you- I'm disappointed in the teenager behind the Tumblr blog who spent hours (or by the looks of some, minutes) photoshopping unrealistic hair expectations only to get that 'like' 'reblog' or "omg i luv ur harrrr XD" comment. 


It's not that we can't do the fantasy colors, its that, well... its unrealistic to a certain extent. See, your hair isn't gong to look like that. Its not going to have that otherworldly glow. Yes, neon's are real. Black-light hair is real. Pastels are real. Rainbow hair is real. But to see a fake photo of it pains us because we now its not going to look EXACTLY like the photo when you leave. We aren't computers. We aren't a free hair app you can download on your phone. This hair you want is going to take hours, multiple sessions, and its probably not going to last as long as you'd like because these unrealistic photos don't tell you the lengths you'll need to go to take care of it. 

Aside from this, there is also the dimension factor. When blonde hair is photoshopped, there are usually darker and lighter pieces in the original picture. Since photoshop colors are transparent, it adds darker and lighter colors to the photo. Some spots are bright blue, some dark blue, some neon, some pastel. It looks like multiple shades when its actually the same transparent blue over different light hitting different strands of the original blonde hair... Hence the otherworldly glow. As a stylist who sees this, now its more than blue- its an impossible blue that our clients want and it has to be possible- they have a photo of it. 



Suffice to say, a photoshop image is not going to work if you bring it into a salon. And of course it can be a little hard to tell what is real and what isn't. Most stylists now have the eye and can tell you before anything if you're dreaming over a fake image. If you'd like to discover it for yourself though, here are some tips:

1. Check to make sure there isn't another photo like it floating around.

If your heart is set but your eyes aren't sure, keep looking. If something stands out in the photo aside from the hair color, search for that instead. Eventually, if the image is fake, the original (or another colored copy) will show up. This actually takes less time than you'd think.

Searched: Pink Hair

Searched: Updo Swirls

2. Just searching 'colorful hair' or 'colorful girl' can steer you in the right direction for finding a photoshop image. 

Sometimes multiples of the same person will show up, and they'll even be wearing the same shirt! *eye roll*





3. Look for unfiltered photos.

Trying 'unfiltered hair' or 'unfiltered colorful hair' can help.

Original?

Filtered


4. Check the neck!

Sounds crazy, but it works! Some photo editors get sloppy and will overlap onto the skin or scalp. Simply zooming in on the image can show a glow where there shouldn't be one. 


Photoshopped 

'Blue' from braid overlapping onto 'purple'

Photoshopped

'Blue' from hair overlapping onto chest
Photoshopped

'Blue' from hair overlapping onto shirt

5. Squint a little.

If you think you're getting better at noticing photoshop but you're still in doubt over the image that stole your heart, sharpen those eyes! Dare to check those little loose hairs to see if there is any overlapping. Most photo editing apps won't pinpoint the finer details, making the fraud easier to spot.


Photoshopped
'Pastel blue' overlapping background


Photoshopped
'Purple' overlapping onto chair

Photoshopped

Color overlapping onto skin

When looking for something real to be inspired by, just hop onto a professional page. There are so many of these on Instagram and you can usually tell if they're a real stylist or not. Most of these will have their Instagram name watermarked on their photos so you can go to their pages and check out more of their work. If they're very popular you can usually find some Youtube videos as well. 





BONUS ROUND!!

Shopped or not?? 


Splat Was a Bad Choice

Splat has become known in professional circles as the worst color you can use on your hair. Sure, there are other bad brands, but Splat is notorious for being the one color line us professional stylists just can't seem to wrap our heads around. Its actually reached the point in my career where I won't accept clients who want a color change if they have ever used any Splat in their hair. I always tell them they'll have to literally wait to grow the color off of their hair, or- my least favorite suggestion- "we can go over it with black."

Yes. Its that bad.

As stylists we've heard every story of people trying to remove Splat. They will usually contact the company and get nothing to go on. Then they'll resort to using some vitamin C and clarifying shampoo concoction, which will maybe knock a shade off. After this consumers typically try washing with Dawn dish soap ('if it takes oil off of sea animals why wont it strip this color??'). And then come the late night kitchen bleach kits from Sally's... Which we hate to tell you only make that Splat more permanent by driving it further into your hair shaft.

Truth be told, even black box color from the dollar store (the store where everything is a dollar) is easier for a professional to remove than Splat brand. Why is this? It seems pretty obvious that Splat themselves have no real solution. Splat has (finally) released their own color remover, but it obviously leaves consumers with much more to be desired. Here are some reviews:

Splat Color Remover

Splat Color Remover review from ShelbiDrizzy

Splat Color Remover review from Lala

Splat Color Remover review from Pam

Splat Color Remover review from sullenxriot182


Among all of the reviews there appeared to be only one written by someone who was pleased. They claimed that the color remover took their hair from a 'dark blue' to a 'lighter green':




Splat Color Remover photo review from Sparkyasaurus
I don't think it takes a trained eye to see whats wrong with the above picture. After all of this, I think its safe to assume that Splat still doesn't know how to remove their own product from anyone's hair.

Of course, I'm sure there will be a ton of people out there backing Splat in all its glory. This is fine- we don't all have to agree on every single thing. But as someone who has messed with this brand first hand, I can tell you I don't enjoy it. If you want me to drop the professional act and tell you how I really feel... Splat is honestly the main bane of my stylist existence. 

I have three main experiences with Splat off the top of my head, and that's because one experience was my first, and the last two had sort of happy endings. After all of these years of having my hands in Splat hair- yes- I have had only TWO positive outcomes. Let that sink in (along with that vitamin C cap) as I take you on this journey.

My first contact came within a year of graduating cosmetology school. I worked in a little salon and was just growing my real-world stylist legs (I also hadn't yet discovered the glory of before and after photos). One evening a girl came in wanting a pretty blue. Her hair was a little past her shoulders and a mahogany brown. She let me know she had used box color on her hair to achieve the brown, and this was fine. I used a professional color remover, it all seemed to lift to blonde, and I was excited for the next step in our process. Sad to say, but that next step never came- when I dried her hair she had a HUGE bright red halo all around her head. I remember just standing there staring at it for quite a time before asking what she thought this could be? She said "Well, I had Splat red in my hair before but it was way over a year ago." This was the first time I'd ever heard of Splat, and I remember wondering who would want to use a product called that in their hair? I tried everything in my power to remove the red from her hair, but to no avail. Can anyone guess what color her hair was when she left? Yep. Red. We did red

The second big experience came a little over a year ago when I received an urgent message from a girl I had went to high school with. She said she helped her friend color her hair and that it didn't work. When I asked for photos the hair was wet and looked like a strange, unflattering green. She told me they'd used Splat. I knew then that this would be basically impossible, but I told them I would try the best I could. I didn't want her to walk around with her hair in that shape. Plus, the only thing she could do a home would be another box color. I wanted to get my hands on it first.

Splat color correction: before photos

Splat color correction: before photos



Her hair didn't look much better in person. I obviously had to ask what their desired result was supposed to be, because this was not it. They had been to the store and purchased a blue/ purple Splat ombre kit. 



Apparently Splat instructions say to apply their lightener and let it process on the hair for 45 minutes. If this doesn't work it directs you to DO IT AGAIN.
Yes, because having lightener on your hair for nearly two hours is a GREAT IDEA. 
I.was.shook
We were also both confused as to how they had applied the purple but it was actually brown. There was no purple in her hair that either of us could see.

The only saving grace was that this client hadn't shampooed her hair after coloring. She had been running late for work so she had only rinsed the color out with water and then ran out the door. Since she didn't shampoo her hair the cuticle wasn't lifted (See: What is Hair Made of) and the pigment wasn't pushed into her strands. For my part I used a professional color remover on her hair, lightened, and applied professional brand fashion colors. I almost cried during the final drying because she looked in the mirror and screamed "I love it!!" as loud as she could. She is now a return client who has sworn off Splat.



My third memorable Splat client wanted pinks, blues, and purples. Her hair was a box brown. I knew she'd had a bright blonde before, but not much outside of that. When she came into the salon I discovered she actually had a box color black over Splat. At this point I let her know that I would try my best but that I definitely couldn't promise a single thing. I used a permanent color remover, toner, another color remover and another toner and, somehow, she was BLONDE!!! This was something I never dreamt could have happened. Her box color must have oxidized the hair, then my two removers and toners finally made it budge. This was an all day process, so we had to reschedule the colors she really wanted. She came back a week later, we toned again, and we finally made her dream colors come true.

Box Black and Splat removal

Desired colors a week later


When I look back on these photos I feel like nothing short of a miracle worker. Then, before my head swells and my ego spikes, I recall every other time I've tried to remove Splat and failed. Which is a lot. Unless my client agrees on the color they can have- which is usually a purple- then I have to turn them down. And as someone who is passionate about hair, I hate having to turn it away. I want to help you guys achieve your hair goals. I want to boost your self esteem. I want you to love what you see every time you look into the mirror- if your hair can make that happen, I want to be the one that gets you there. I can't do that if you use Splat at home. It literally prohibits me, other stylists, and you in the long run. Please do us and yourself a favor and stay away from this product. The two good outcomes I've had were nothing short of miracles. 

Something else that should be obvious is that these processes aren't cheap. When you go into a salon you pay not only for the product but for the stylists time. Using a $10 box of Splat at home could cost $200+ to correct in a salon, depending on your location. Where people tend to mix it up with stylists is they think we charge this because we want to rip them off- I promise we don't. We would much rather you come to us before using a box. Not only does it save you a crap ton of money in the long run, but it also saves us time, lets us be more exact, gets you to your goal color more accurately, and allows us to squeeze in a lunch break at some point! And- if you want more honesty- we make more money the more clients we have. We could have up to six color clients in the time it takes for us to do one Splat color correction. This boils down to- yep, you guessed it- we ALL lose money over Splat. It does no one any favors. 

Well, except maybe the company themselves. Let that sink in too.