

Colorista sprays don’t contain chalk, but they certainly feel like chalk, and they volumise amazingly well… though it isn’t really something you necessarily want. Afterwards, the colour shed onto my clothes and neck quite a bit even with the hair spray. It makes it easier to target bits of hair for a mermaidy look, but it also shoots through the hair quite a bit. This isn’t too surprising, but during application I think it’s made slightly worse by the special skinny Colorista nozzle that sprays the colour in a very concentrated jet, rather than the usual misting spray. After covering my clothes with a towel I sprayed it on the ends, then combed it to distribute the colour and sealed it with a ton of hair spray. I tried the Hot Pink Colorista shade first on the ends of my hair. This didn’t sound super promising, but I still lived in hope… L’Oreal Colorista Spray in Hot Pink I picked up two shades at the Priceline press event: hot pink (“#HotPinkHair”) which I was told would definitely work on dark hair, and pastel blue (“#PastelBlueHair”) that I was told “could give a subtle effect” if I went into the sun. The hair chalk craze was a sad adventure in disappointment because nothing showed up in my dark hair (I still have a drawer full of chalk and broken dreams).

I’ve always wanted pastel hair, but as a black-haired Asian with undyed hair (well, poorly dyed reddish brown hair that’s pretty much black) I’m going to need a bucketload of bleach and Olaplex to get there – if I even get there at all without my hair all breaking off. Like every other dark-haired Asian, my first thought was “Will they work on me?” The pastel shades are designed for blondes, but the brights are advertised to work “on brunettes” as well. L’Oreal Colorista is a new-ish temporary hair colour range that includes a set of spray-on “1-day” hair colours.
