Hairstyling Services at Tangles Salon (Up to 44% Off). Three Options Available.
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Expert stylist Bre Minnock updates looks with meticulous cuts and conditioning before brightening strands with optional highlights or color
Choice of:
- Shampoo, Haircut, and Style; Brow, Lip, or Chin Waxing
- Haircut, Style, and Deep-Conditioning Treatment with Partial Highlights
- Haircut, Style, and Deep-Conditioning Treatment with Single-Process Color
Full vs. Partial Highlights: Exploring New Dimension
Highlights can add dimension to an existing style or double the transformative effect of a new one. Read our guide of the process to prepare for your trip to the salon.
A skilled stylist doesn’t need a pair of scissors to transform a hairdo. The precise application of highlights—which isolate select strands of hair and treat them with a color, lightener, or toner—can become the basis for a brand new look without a single snip or shear. Before entering the salon, however, a client has to decide how much of the hair to highlight. Applied evenly throughout the entire head, full highlights create a natural look that mimics the way hair changes color over time in the sun, adding a sense of dimension and texture to the existing hair. Partial highlights, which are typically cheaper and take less time to apply, serve an altogether different purpose: drawing attention to specific features, such as bangs or newly sharpened antlers, by accenting only the locks on the surface. As a result, partial highlights are somewhat less flexible—losing their effect, for example, when putting your hair up or teasing it out.
Expert stylist Bre Minnock updates looks with meticulous cuts and conditioning before brightening strands with optional highlights or color
Choice of:
- Shampoo, Haircut, and Style; Brow, Lip, or Chin Waxing
- Haircut, Style, and Deep-Conditioning Treatment with Partial Highlights
- Haircut, Style, and Deep-Conditioning Treatment with Single-Process Color
Full vs. Partial Highlights: Exploring New Dimension
Highlights can add dimension to an existing style or double the transformative effect of a new one. Read our guide of the process to prepare for your trip to the salon.
A skilled stylist doesn’t need a pair of scissors to transform a hairdo. The precise application of highlights—which isolate select strands of hair and treat them with a color, lightener, or toner—can become the basis for a brand new look without a single snip or shear. Before entering the salon, however, a client has to decide how much of the hair to highlight. Applied evenly throughout the entire head, full highlights create a natural look that mimics the way hair changes color over time in the sun, adding a sense of dimension and texture to the existing hair. Partial highlights, which are typically cheaper and take less time to apply, serve an altogether different purpose: drawing attention to specific features, such as bangs or newly sharpened antlers, by accenting only the locks on the surface. As a result, partial highlights are somewhat less flexible—losing their effect, for example, when putting your hair up or teasing it out.