
Rainbow hair is a lot
 easier on the eyes than it is on the actual hair. Hours of bleaching 
and coloring can take a toll on your strands, especially if you are 
naturally brunette. However, genius hairstylists like Caitlin Ford have come up with a solution. The St. Louis–based hair pro
 came up with a technique she calls "Velvet Vivids," which involves 
lightening the hair as you would with traditional highlights (instead of
 bleaching the hair from roots to tips) before adding rainbow dyes. "The
 result is a softer rainbow effect that works well on darker hair 
because it doesn't need to be lightened as severely," Ford tells Allure. The technique is similar to that of this low-maintenance rose gold dye job.
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Before
 breaking down the complete process for me, Ford prefaces that this 
technicolor fantasy isn't a look you can achieve at home. Instead, it 
requires a professional colorist to pull off. "You really need to know 
color theory and have experience formulating hair-color to know what 
shades to mix and to lighten the hair in the most controlled way," she 
explains. With that in mind, you'll need to book an appointment with 
your stylist and expect to have a consultation first.

OK,
 now that we have that issue addressed, Ford says she starts off the 
Velvet Vivids process by brushing on bleach with a lower volume 
developer as she would traditional highlights to make her client's hair 
about three shades lighter than it naturally is. After letting the 
highlights process, she was left with a "brassy orangey-yellow color," 
she says, so Ford mixed up concentrated rainbow dyes that combine well 
with the orange in the highlights. Then, she applied those in a rainbow 
gradient that our digital deputy editor, Sam Escobar, cleverly dubbed "rainbombré."
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Depending
 on how thick your hair is, the total process takes three to five hours,
 Ford says. It's all worth it for colorful, yet still healthy hair, and 
you'll be left with a subtle rainbow for a good three to four months. 
Another plus: "The way the color is patterned makes it easy to replicate
 the same look over and over again," Ford notes. Trust me, folks — this 
is about as low-maintenance and strand-friendly as rainbow hair gets.