The New York Times: Is Dyeing Your Hair Bad for Your Health?
Here’s what the research suggests about the link between hair dye and cancer. Credit...Joyce Lee for The New York Times Supported by By Rachel Rabkin Peachman Q. I color my hair regularly, but I’ve ...
MSN: How safe are natural hair dyes? Pros, cons, and what you should know
In your quest for the perfect hair dye—whether it’s to cover those first few grays (but let’s be real, gray is totally the new black) or to try something new just for the fun of it—you’ve probably ...
How safe are natural hair dyes? Pros, cons, and what you should know
If you dye something such as hair or cloth, you change its colour by soaking it in a special liquid. The women prepared, spun and dyed the wool. [VERB noun] She had dyed black hair. [VERB-ed]
Die is a verb. When a person, animal, or plant dies, they stop living. The other forms of 'die' are dies, dying, died. Dye is both a noun and a verb. If you dye something such as hair or cloth, you change its colour by soaking it in a coloured liquid. This liquid is called a dye.
The latest in a decades-old movement among those in the Black community to embrace natural hair reached the halls of state government last month when the House of Representatives passed its version of ...
KVUE: KVUE Profiles: Getting to the root of hair's significance in Black culture