MSN: Ammonia-Free Hair Dyes: Are They Really the Best Choice for Covering Grays?
In the quest for a less harsh hair coloring experience, ammonia-free hair dyes have become a popular choice, especially for those looking to cover grays without causing too much damage. But are they ...
Ammonia-Free Hair Dyes: Are They Really the Best Choice for Covering Grays?
MSN: Chemical hair dyes losing ground? Why Indians are switching to ammonia-free and herbal hair colours
Chemical hair dyes losing ground? Why Indians are switching to ammonia-free and herbal hair colours
Ammonia is a common hair dye ingredient — it’s what lifts the outer cuticle around the hair shaft to allow the color to set in. This process can cause your hair to be stripped of protein which leaves ...
PERMANENTLY dyeing hair goes hand in hand with damaging it. The process dries out hair and leaves it jagged. Ammonia — used to open the hair fiber so that dye molecules can nestle in — is as delicate ...
NBC New York: Original & Mineral Founder Alan Buki on the Importance of Non-Ammonia Hair Dye
Original & Mineral Founder Alan Buki on the Importance of Non-Ammonia Hair Dye
Scientific American: Hair dye soon to debut in U.S. that has ammonia's power, sans its odor
Hair dye soon to debut in U.S. that has ammonia's power, sans its odor
Ammonia is found throughout the Solar System on Earth, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto, among other places: on smaller, icy bodies such as Pluto, ammonia can act as a geologically important antifreeze, as a mixture of water and ammonia can have a melting point as low as −100 °C (−148 °F; 173 K) if the ammonia ...