The dye from the henna (lawsonia inermis) plant is called lawsone. If extracted and isolated from the plant, lawsone is a bright orange color. When henna leaves are harvested, dried, and made into powder, and that powder is subsquently mixed with an acidic liquid to form a paste, the lawsone precursor molecules which exist in the henna is released as an intermediate molecule called an aglycone. This aglycone molecule can attach to keratin—such as that which forms the outer layers of hair stands and skin– and then oxidize to its final, stable form. The result on light hair is anywhere between a bright, fiery copper to a deep auburn.
There is no such
thing as “brown henna,” or “black henna.” Products with such
labels most likely contain some henna along with additional plant dye
powders, or even synthetic dyes such as para-phenylenediamine (PPD).
This goes for both products marketed for hair use as well as for use
on the skin. The truth is, pure henna will only color keratin a
variation of orange to red-orange.
In order to achieve
a darker result when using henna, something must be added to the
henna mix, or the hair/skin must be exposed to heat during or after
processing.
This article will
explain what can be done to safely and effectively deepen
henna results on hair*, as well as what should not be done.
*Note: The same kinds of rules do not always apply in the same way to henna used on the skin. For more information on henna as body art, read “Henna for Body Art 101: How to Achieve a Dark, Long-Lasting Stain” in BecomingMoonlight.Blog. Please also note that if you live in the United States, the FDA does not allow the use of henna for body art purposes (i.e., coloring the skin). Here are the US FDA regulations for the use of henna for the purpose of body art. These regulations have the force of law: https://www.fda.gov/cosmetics/productsingredients/products/ucm108569.htm
Do: Mix your henna powder with an acidic fruit juice
For a rich, vibrant result, it is important that the henna paste properly dye-releases. Water alone is not enough and will cause light, brassy results. A mildly acidic liquid allows the maximum release of aglycone molecules by keeping them in a hydrogen-rich environment. Water releases some dye molecules, but cannot keep them in their intermediate state as well. The result from a water-only mix is lighter and often less permanent because dye molecules either have not released from the plant material or have released and oxidized to a final state which cannot bond to keratin; therefore, fewer aglycones are available to color the hair. The dye molecules bond to keratin by way of a Michael Addition, which requires the extra hydrogen ions that exist in an acidic solution.
Leaving an acidic paste at room temperature allows for a slower, and better-controlled release of the maximum amount of aglycones. More dye molecules become available in the paste over time, while the acidity prevents rapid oxidation of those molecules (demise). At room temperature, an acidic henna mix is ready after eight to twelve hours. To learn more about proper dye release, read Chapter Six of the Ancient Sunrise Henna for Hair E-Book and “Henna 101: How to Dye-Release Henna” in this blog.
The liquid does not
have to be overly acidic. A pH of 5.5 is sufficient. Lemon juice,
with a pH of 2-3, is very acidic. Lemon juice can be diluted with 1-3
parts water for an effective mixing liquid. Undiluted lemon juice
should be used with care and avoided by those with sensitive skin. To
read more about using lemon juice in henna mixes, read The article
titled “Should
You Be Using Lemon Juice In Your Henna Mix?”
Other fruit juices
such as orange, apple, and cranberry are effective for mixing with
henna. However, cranberry is often recommended for keeping results
lighter and brighter, as the antioxidant content in cranberry juice
may prevent darkening.
Ancient Sunrise® also offers fruit acid powders which can be used with distilled water to create a mildly acidic solution. The fruit acid powder called Malluma Kristalovino is gentle on sensitive skin and can help make results deeper. Nightfall Rose fruit acid powder adds subtle ash tones to henna. Amla fruit acid powder can help a henna/indigo mix bind more effectively to hair for deeper, cooler brunette shades.
Don’t: Mix your
henna with coffee
Mixing coffee with
henna has been recommended by other sources as a way to deepen
resulting colors. This has been proven to be ineffective. Not only
will adding coffee do very little to the color, but the trans-dermal
nature of caffeine will leave a person with jitters or a bad
headache. Henna paste needs to be left on for at least three hours.
During that time, caffeine would be entering the bloodstream through
the skin at a rather rapid rate. Additionally, the paste would smell
quite unpleasant.
Do: Apply heat
during processing and/or after rinsing
Heat causes the
outer cuticle layers of hair strands to open up, thus allowing better
dye penetration. Once you have applied the henna paste to your hair
and have wrapped it up, keep your head warm by covering it with a
thick, knitted cap or a towel. You may also choose to aim a hairdryer
at your head for intervals of a few minutes at a time, or sit
somewhere warm and sunny. Heat can both speed up processing time and
ensure a more saturated result.
After the henna paste has been rinsed out, you may choose to use heat again to speed up the oxidation process. Hennaed hair is naturally lighter and brighter first upon rinsing, and will take several days to a week to settle into its final color. Using a hair dryer or heat styling tools can cause oxidation to occur more quickly. Continual use will darken hennaed hair more and more over time. This darkening is permanent, and can only be reversed with the use of lightening products. Those who wish to avoid causing their hennaed hair to darken should avoid excessive use of heat styling.
Don’t: Mix
henna paste with hot or boiling liquid
Many henna for hair
products instruct users to mix the powder with hot or boiling water.
This technique leads to a rapid release, and subsequent demise, of
the dye molecule. As stated above, an acidic liquid allows for more
aglycones to be available in the paste at the time of application.
The boiling-water method of mixing henna causes lighter, brassier
results. With henna, as many other good things in life, patience is
key.
Do: Apply henna
to clean hair
The sebum, dirt,
minerals, and product buildup in unwashed hair prevent dye uptake.
For the best results, apply henna to hair that has been treated with
Ancient Sunrise Rainwash mineral treatment followed by a clarifying
shampoo. At the very least, shampoo your hair very well. Skip the
conditioner. Particularly oily or resistant hair can be washed with a
few drops of dish-washing detergent to ensure it is ready for dyeing.
If you are a no-poo
or low-poo person, this does mean you will have to break your regimen
just once if you want the best results. There is just no way around
it. Baking soda and vinegar, clay, natural herbs, or any other
washing methods will not remove sebum, dirt, and mineral buildup
effectively enough for the purposes of coloring hair with henna.
Don’t: Add oils
to a henna for hair mix
Just as oils on the
hair will prevent effective dye uptake, so will oils added to a henna
mix. While some might believe that adding oils or even other
ingredients such as milk or yogurt to a henna mix may help, they do
not. To read more about what not to add to a henna mix, read Don’t
Put Food On Your Head.
Certain types of
essential oils, called “terps” (short for monoterpene alcohols)
are added to henna pastes made for body art. When used on skin,
“terped” henna results in deep burgundy to near-black stains.
However, essential oils should not be used in henna for hair.
They can cause the resulting color to be muddy (not darker in a
desirable way). In addition, leaving a paste containing essential
oils on the head for an extended period of time will lead to
headaches and scalp irritation.
Do: Add indigo
for brunette results
As discussed earlier, the lawsone molecule from henna can provide orange to auburn results when henna plant powder is used alone. In order to achieve brunette tones, another plant dye powder must be added. Indigo plant dye powder contains dye of the same name. This is the dye that was originally used to color denim, and is still used today in many textile traditions. The type of indigo powder used in henna mixes is called vashma indigo. This is made from indigo leaves that have been partially fermented before being dried and powdered. If used on its own on light hair, indigo may color hair grey-blue, sometimes violet, and sometimes a blueish green. The effect is difficult to control and not as permanent as henna.
When used in the
right ratios, henna and indigo together will color light hair
virtually any natural brunette shade from medium brown to warm black.
Unlike henna, indigo does not need acid and time for dye release. It
must be mixed with only water just prior to application. To add
indigo to henna, mix the powder with distilled water until it is a
similar consistency as the henna paste, then combine it thoroughly
with dye-released henna paste and apply immediately.
Don’t: Add
black walnut powder, anything claiming to be “Buxus” or “Katam,”
or synthetic dyes
Black walnut powder is sometimes mentioned in natural hair care communities for the use of dyeing hair brown. The effect is not as permanent as henna. Additionally, black walnut is known to cause allergic reaction for many people. It is therefore best avoided.
Buxus dioica, also
called katam, is a plant that works similarly to indigo when used
with henna. The result is shades of brunette. However, buxus was only
grown in and exported from Yemen. The conflict occurring within the
country has ceased exports and production of buxus and other goods.
There are a few vendors which claim to carry buxus. At best, those
products are in all actuality indigo powder labeled as buxus. At
worst, they contain dangerous or ineffective ingredients.
Do not add
synthetic (store-bought or salon) hair dyes to your henna mix. They
are not compatible and are not meant to be used in the same mixture.
Oxidative dyes color the hair through a very different chemical
process than henna. Do not try to add other types of dyes, such as
fabric dye or food coloring.
You can, however,
safely use semi/demi-permanent or oxidative dyes over hair that has
been colored with Ancient Sunrise® henna for hair products (and no
other henna product), as the plant powders sold by Ancient Sunrise®
have been tested
in an independent lab to ensure they do not contain mineral salts
or other adulterants which may react with synthetic hair products.
Also Don’t: Use
premixed “henna for hair” products
Some “natural”
hair coloring products which promise a brunette or black result
declare a combination of henna, indigo, and/or other plant
ingredients. Because henna and indigo must be prepared separately,
any product which blends the plant dye powders together is likely to
produce inferior results.
Some products labeled as henna for hair may also contain azo dyes (such as Red 33) or oxidative dyes (such as PPD). The requirement for ingredients declarations varies from country to country so that some products manufactured outside of the US do not report all of the ingredients which they contain. While such products are not allowed to enter the United States, all too often they slip by. It is best to stick with purchasing pure plant dye powders in separate packages and mixing them yourself. While a pre-mixed product may seem tempting, opting for Ancient Sunrise® products and methods allows you to keep your peace of mind.
Do: Repeated
applications of henna
While henna does not “coat” the hair, repeated applications will cause your hair to be more saturated with dye each time. We often recommend to only color new hair growth after a person has achieved their desired color. This is because repeated applications will cause darkening over time. However, if you are looking for a deeper, richer color, feel free to reapply henna to the entire length of your hair until you get it to where you like. Unlike with conventional dyes, repeated applications will not damage the hair; in fact, continuing to use henna will condition and strengthen the hair.
Leaving the paste
in your hair longer can also contribute to a deeper result. However,
only do this if you are not using indigo. Indigo’s dyeing power
begins to slow after about three hours, after which the henna part of
a henna/indigo mix will continue to color the hair. The result of
leaving a henna/indigo mix on the hair longer than three hours may be
redder than desired.
Don’t: Re-henna
too hastily
Keep in mind that henna’s color naturally deepens over the course of the week following application. If you rinse your henna out and immediately feel that it is just a couple of shades too bright, wait at least a few days before reassessing. You may find that a little bit of time is all you needed to reach your desired shade. Reapplying too quickly may cause you to overshoot, and end up with a final color that is much darker than intended.
Do: Comment on
this article or contact Ancient Sunrise® Customer
Service if you have any additional questions about deepening your
hennaed hair results.
There is a wide variety of products available for coloring hair which claim to be pure henna, or which claim to contain pure henna powder along with additional natural plant ingredients. There is no international standard for what can be marketed as henna, and it is often difficult to tell which products are what they claim to be. Many henna for hair products lack an ingredient declaration. A package may show only some ingredients or have no ingredients list at all.
Additionally,
products which claim to contain all-natural ingredients vary in
quality as there are no
internationally agreed upon standards for “all natural”.
Powders may be poorly sifted, containing sand or larger plant
particles which make for difficult application and removal. Stale or
low dye-content henna products may contain additives such as
additional dyes or metallic salts to compensate for poor quality of
materials. Green dye may be added to henna powder to make it look
fresher.
The
FDA has a standard for henna and products entering the United
States labeled as a “henna” hair coloring product. These
guidelines are do not appear to be regularly enforced as are
regulations for products labeled as henna for use on skin.
The FDA forbids the
sale of and is empowered to confiscate of any henna
product labeled for skin use, or products showing images of henna
used on skin. Customs and border protection is empowered to search
the importing company’s website to determine if henna is intended for
use on skin, and may seize and destroy henna that appears to be
imported for use on skin.
This article is the
first of a series that will test and compare various “henna for
hair” products which have been found online on sites such as Amazon
and Ebay, in import stores in
the USA, and in ‘health food stores’. The purpose of these
studies will be to determine the quality of those products in
comparison to Ancient Sunrise® Henna for Hair products, and to test
for the existence of dye additives. This series will feature articles
investigating products within the following categories:
1.“Pure” henna, herbal henna mixes, and red result henna for hair products
2. Brunette result henna for hair products
3. Black result henna for hair products
This article will
cover the first category by investigating nine samples of retail
henna hair dye products which are labeled and/or advertised as 100%
pure henna, a 100% natural mix of henna and additional “herbs”,
or as henna-based hair products which claim to color the hair red.
Subsequent articles will report on henna for hair products claiming
to color hair brunette and black.
The first part of this article will report on product labeling, visual and textural qualities of the products as dry powders, and visual and textural qualities of products when mixed with liquid to form a paste. The second part of this article will report the results of paper chromatography tests designed to determine the existence of dyes, lawsone or otherwise, in each sample.
Sample Selection
and Label Analysis
Nine “henna”
hair dye products were selected based on the following criteria:
1) The product claims to contain only 100% natural henna.
OR
2) The product claims to be 100% natural, containing henna along with additional “herbs.”
AND
3) The product either claims a red result or does NOT claim to dye the hair brunette or black.*
*Products that claim to contain henna and other plant powders for brunette and black hair results will be tested and reported in future articles.
Not all products
that are marketed as 100% pure henna state explicitly state a hair
color result, as some are marketed for both hair and skin, as well as
for mixing with other plant dye powders such as indigo. Henna has
been used for hair, skin, and home remedies for centuries. It can be
assumed that if a product claims to be 100% henna, it should provide
a reddish result on lighter hair..
These products are
a random collection of henna products purchased in shops and online,
easily accessible to the retail consumer. In fact, very few brands,
if any, submit their plant dye powders to the same testing standards
as Ancient Sunrise®. Ancient Sunrise® products are sent to an
independent
laboratory for multiple tests prior to sale to ensure they do not
contain adulterants, accidental or deliberate.
Below are images of the labels for the nine samples. Beyond this section, each sample will be referred to as its corresponding number. They will be tested alongside Ancient Sunrise® Rajasthani Twilight henna powder, which will be referred to as “AS”.
Sample #1
The
product claims to be 100% natural. The ingredients are reported as
“100% Natural Henna Powder.” The product also claims to be
organic.
This
product fits into criterion 1. There is no information suggesting
there are other ingredients other than henna. The label would lead
the everyday consumer to assume that the contents of the packaging
are pure, natural henna powder.
However,
descriptions on sites
selling this product claim a “Beautiful
golden brown color” which is inconsistent with results expected
from pure henna. This would suggest either 1) The product is not what
it claims to be or 2) Poor quality product and/or poor instructions
lead to a lighter result.
Instructions
are included on the back of the packaging. On the side of the box, it
states that this is a product of India.
Sample #2
This
product fits both criteria 1 and 3, as it claims to be 100% natural
henna powder, and also reports a red result in addition to showing
multiple images of red hair on the packaging.
No
instructions were provided. The label includes an address of an
import company. The website listed does not exist. Some
additional searching found that the company has a contract with a
manufacturing and export company in Pakistan, and that this is one
type of product they export, along with clothing and gift items.
Sample #3
While
the front of this package claims it is 100% natural henna, and states
that the shade is copper, the back is unclear. It says “Copper: for
dark blond, light brown hair,” which most likely means that dark
blonde or light brown hair may be colored to a copper color. It also
mentions “neutral henna” which suggests that it contains cassia
obovata. However, on the website, the only ingredient listed for this
product is “Lawsonia inermis (henna) leaf extract.” Based on the
reported ingredients, this product fits criterion 1 as a product that
claims to be pure henna.
A
pamphlet included in the box provides instructions which recommend
mixing the paste with hot water and applying once the mixture has
cooled.
While
the packaging says that the product is made in France, there is no
indication of the origin of the henna powder. If it does contain
henna, it is most likely mixed and/or assembled in France with
ingredients imported from elsewhere.
Sample #4
This
product claims to contain henna under the insert’s first section,
“Composition.” It claims to provide a deep red result. However,
the description is confusing, as it states that lawsone and
“mannitte” are responsible for coloring. If mannite is to be
understood as the sugar alcohol, mannitol, it would not affect color.
The
product claims to be “Henna with natural herbs,” but these
additional ingredients are not reported anywhere. In the
chromatography section, it will become clear that this product
clearly contains more than just henna powder.
This
product includes instructions on the insert, and is a product of
Egypt.
Sample #5
This
product’s label includes something close to an ingredients list, as
it reports henna powder along with additional herbs which are meant
to affect the color result as well as to condition the hair.
This
product fits criterion 2. There is no indication of color result,
other than stating that the blend of herbs and henna “give the dark
color”. In fact, the label states “It does not contain any colour
or dye.” This may be intended to mean that the product does not
contain any synthetic dyes. If the product does contain henna, it
would color light hair a red tone. None of the additional herbs
listed are ones which produce a dye, but some plant powders can
affect the tone of hennaed hair. This is most likely what the
packaging means to suggest.
The
instructions recommend mixing the product with water in an “iron
vessel”* and letting it sit for to hours. If the product does
contain amla powder, it may be enough to create an acidic mix.
The
product was manufactured in India.
*An
iron dye pot can be
effective at decreasing
the vibrancy of dye
colors in a boiling pot to dye yarn or cloth, but will not change the
result of henna on hair. The iron pot may cause the dye
released paste surface to look browner, but there is no significant
effect on the hair.
Sample #6
This
product, like #5, is labeled as a henna and herbal mix for
conditioning hair, but does not explicitly state a color result. On
the product’s site, it is described as providing a “rich burgundy
shade.”
The
front of the packaging includes the words “100% natural” and
“Mehendi,” another term for henna. It is unclear whether this
should be read as two phrases or one, as the from also clearly states
that there are nine additional herbs. The back of the package
describes supposed benefits of the added herbs. The phrase
“Rajasthani Mehendi” means that the henna in this product is from
the Rajasthan region of India, which is where much of the world’s
henna, including Ancient Sunrise®
henna, is grown.
The
ingredients list states that henna powder is the first ingredient,
followed by powder forms of the following: aloe, neem, brahmi,
bhringraj, amla, hibiscus flower, shikakai, jatamansi, and methi. All
of these ingredients are commonly known and sold in South Asian
stores as health and beauty herbs.
This
product has instructions on the back of the packaging. It recommends
mixing the powder with water and letting it sit for 2-3 hours. Like
sample #5, it is possible that some of the added herbs are acidic
enough that water would be enough. It also suggests adding oil or
curd for “extra softness.” Doing so would affect the dye uptake,
leading to lighter results. To learn more about what not to add to
henna mixes, read Henna
for Hair 101: Don’t Put Food On Your Head.
It is
from India, and is a very popular “henna for hair” product both
in South Asia and in the States, and is widely available online and
in international grocery stores.
Sample #7
This
product claims to contain henna. The brand’s website
describes it as a 100% natural product. The site also sells “henna
neutral” (cassia powder) and “henna black/basma” (indigo
powder), which would suggest that their “henna red” is their
henna (lawsonia inermis) powder. Therefore, this product seems to fit
criterion 1, a product is labeled/advertised as a 100% pure henna
powder product, but it is not entirely clear due to a lack of
ingredient declaration.
However,
the table on the back seems inconsistent with true henna results, as
they suggest that, one would see some variation of brunette or copper
results. Like sample #1, it is possible that this is either due to
the product containing additional ingredients, or ineffective
mixing/application methods.
I will
still include this product in within this group of samples because it
is both labeled as henna, includes the word “red,” and the
website claims it is a 100% natural product.
There
is a US address on the back, but no indication of where the henna was
grown.
Sample #8
This
product fits criterion 1 as it claims to be 100% natural henna. It
includes instructions on the back of the packaging. The brand’s
website appears to sell additional hair care products such as
shampoos, conditioners, and oils. The product has an Indian address
on its packaging.
Sample #9
This product qualifies for criterion 1 as a product that claims to be pure henna powder. The information made available on this packaging is minimal. It states that it contains natural “hina” (henna) powder with no added chemicals, and that henna has been used as a dye for centuries. There are no instructions. The address listed is in London, UK, but the source of the henna is not listed. An internet search found that this brand, like sample #2, is part of an international exporting company that sells a variety of items such as health product, gifts, and books. It specializes in Islamic items.
Powder and Paste Qualities
There
was a wide variation in powder sift, texture, and scent among the
samples. When mixed with liquid, the resulting pastes also varied in
qualities.
Ancient
Sunrise®
henna is grown in the Rajasthan region of India and is finely sifted.
Many of the Rajasthani hennas have a slimy, stringy texture when made
into a paste. This is because henna plants will have more or less
natural mucilage depending on the cultivar (variety of plant). Not
all hennas have this texture, and some are naturally more creamy.
Pakistani henna tends to have less mucilage and a greater coefficient
of expansion. The higher coeffient of expansion and lower mucilage
leads to paste cracking when henna is used as body art; it does not
make any difference in hair application.
It
could be assumed that hennas manufactured in a country were also
grown there, unless the address is outside of where henna is
naturally grown, such as those products with company addresses in
Europe or the United States. In the case of the latter, it not
possible to determine the origin of the henna. More information on
this textural quality of henna pastes can be found on page 23 and 24
of Chapter
Four: Henna Science and Microscopy from the Ancient
Sunrise free E-book.
Quality
henna powder should not be gritty, chunky, or contain visible pieces
of plant leaf and/or stem. Henna should not bubble or turn frothy
when mixed with liquid. Some other plant powders which contain
saponins, such as Zizyphus, do froth. Bubbles may also indicate some
reaction between the acidic liquid and an unknown ingredient in the
powder.
Pure
henna has a neutral, plant-like odor similar to dried straw or hay.
It does not smell floral or spicy; it smells like leaves. Pure henna
powder does not have a perfumed, pine, camphor, or eucalyptus scent.
Henna powders can vary in color from light green to olive green.
While color can be indicative of the powder’s freshness and
quality, it is not always the case. Powders can be made greener by
adding dyes.
For products labeled
as henna for use on hair, the FDA has the following specifications:
“It shall not contain more than 10 percent of plant material from Lawsonia alba Lam. (Lawsonia inermis L.) other than the leaf and petiole, and shall be free from admixture with material from any other species of plant.
Moisture, not more than 10 percent.
Total ash, not more than 15 percent.
Acid-insoluble ash, not more than 5 percent.
Lead (as Pb), not more than 20 parts per million.
Arsenic (as As), not more than 3 parts per million.”
In
other words, a product labeled as henna needs to be made from the
leaf or petiole (leaf stalk) of the plant rather than the bark,
roots, or any other part. It should be a dry good. It should contain
no more than 15 percent inorganic filler, or ash.
This can include substances such as sand and metallic salts. “Free
from admixture with material from any other species of plant” means
that products containing henna mixed with other herbs or plant
materials are illegal to enter the United States. Several of the
products selected for this article are labeled as herb mixes. Others,
while labeled as pure henna, smell like additional herbs were
included but not reported on the labeling or ingredients.
Please
note that even if a henna product conforms to FDA standards, this
does not necessarily make it a quality product. This list is simply
the minimum for what the FDA considers an acceptably safe product for
sale and use within the United States. A product labeled as henna for
hair could be roughly ground henna leaves with 15% sand and still be
legal. It is also important to mention that this article does not aim
to determine the legality or safety of any of the products tested.
This article serves only to report on observable physical qualities
and on the presence of dyes in each product.
Below are the observations on each sample.
#1.
This product was labeled as 100% natural, organic henna powder. No
other ingredients were reported. The color was not of any concern.
However, there was a faint herbal scent that suggested additional
plant powders were added, most likely one or more of those commonly
found in henna herbal mixes, such as shikakai, neem and so forth. The
sift was fine. When mixed into a paste, the consistency was
acceptable; its a slimy, gel-like texture was similar to Rajasthani
hennas, such as the AS sample. This makes sense, given that product
was from India.
#2.
This product also claimed to be pure henna. However, there was a very
noticeable herbal scent. The color of the powder was much deeper than
a henna powder should be, almost like the color of nutmeg powder.
Larger particles in the powder suggested a low sift. When mixed into
a paste, the product frothed slightly and had a gritty consistency.
The paste also showed a darker color than would be normal for a henna
paste that had just been mixed. Shikakai
powder has a red tone and herbal scent, lathers slightly when
mixed. This may explain the qualities in found with this product, but
would mean that the product is definitely not pure henna.
#3 The
product claimed to be pure henna. There was nothing out of the
ordinary about the color or texture of this product. Some of the
powder formed soft lumps which could be broken with light pressure.
There was no discernible scent beyond a normal plant-like scent. The
color was acceptable for henna powder. The paste consistency was
thinner and runnier than the others, despite all powders being mixed
with the same amount of liquid.
#4.
The product was labeled as “henna with natural herbs.” There was
a very strong herbal scent of something other than henna. The powder
was a vivid, brick red, and did smell like the other “herbal
hennas” and like samples #1 and #2. The powder had large plant
particulate matter and long, thin pieces of plant fiber. When liquid
was added, the liquid itself immediately turned blood red even prior
to mixing. The paste, after mixing, was blood red. This suggests that
the product contains a water-soluble red dye. The paste texture was
much grittier than a normal henna paste should be. Shikakai would not
be a sufficient explanation for the color of this powder because
while it has a red color, shikakai does not produce a dye.
#5.
This product was labeled as henna with added herbs. The scent matched
this. The powder showed large stem and/or leaf fiber particles which
were easily visible to the naked eye. The paste consistency reflected
this lower level of sift. There was a slight sliminess to the paste;
if better sifted, the product may have produced a paste similar to a
Rajasthani henna. The light green-brown color of the powder and paste
was similar to how a henna product should appear.
#6.
This product, like #5, was labeled as an herbal henna. Both had
similar added herbs reported on their packaging. The product was
better sifted than #5, but some plant particulates were visible. The
powder had an herbal scent. The paste showed more of the shiny, slimy
mucilage texture than #5, but not as much as can be seen in the AS
sample. This would match the packaging’s statement that the henna
was from the Rajasthan region of India. The powder and paste colors
were a light green-brown consistent with natural henna products.
#7.
This product was the “red henna” product of three sold by the
company: Red (henna), Neutral (cassia), and Black (indigo). One might
assume that the products are sold for the purpose of mixing, much
like Ancient Sunrise plant dye powders, but it is not clear. The
powder was of a light green color with pieces of plant fiber visible.
The powder had an odor consistent with henna, but the product frothed
when mixed with liquid. The paste was quite gritty.
#8.
This product was labeled as 100% natural henna. The color was of a
light greenish straw tone, along the lines of a standard henna powder
color. In color, it was the sample most similar to the AS sample.
When mixed with liquid, the resulting paste was noticeable gritty,
but with some mucilage. There was no herbal scent.
#9. The
product was also labeled as 100% natural henna. The color of the
powder was deeper than what might be accepted from a henna powder,
almost a muddy green. The powder appeared fairly well sifted, with
some very thin, long plant fibers visible. The paste was fairly
smooth but not slimy, and a mid-brown color. There was no herbal
odor.
AS.
This powder is finely sifted, soft to the touch, and a pale green
color. No large leaf or stem pieces or fibers as visible. There is a
faint dried-hay scent. The paste was a clay-green color had a smooth,
slimy texture. In fact, in comparison the other samples, this sample
took more focus to apply the paste to paper chromatography strips
because of its mucous-like texture.
Chromatography
Paper chromatography
is a simple method used to separate dyes in order to determine the
presence of one or more dyes. The method involves placing a small
sample of a substance onto a thin strip of absorbent paper, then
hanging the strip so the end of it is just below the surface of a
liquid solvent.
As the solvent travels up the strip, dyes move along with it. Dyes which differ in chemical structure will move at different rates before stopping. The result is that each individual dye will create its own mark at a certain place between the point of application and the solvent front (the highest point that the solvent reaches). Multiple dyes will show as multiple marks.
Below is the result of a paper chromatography test done on store-bought food coloring. One can see that the green dye is a combination of yellow and blue dyes, which were separated through the chromatography process.
One drawback of the
simpler paper chromatography method is that it alone cannot identify
the dye in each sample unless the target dye is already known.
Because Ancient Sunrise henna powders are tested by an independent
lab, it can be assumed that the only dye present is lawsone, which
will show a dye band distinct from other dyes’ banding. If a
product results in one or more bands that appear different from
lawsone, it can be assumed that other dyes are present.
It was necessary to test each product under multiple conditions to achieve as full a picture as possible. Because the target dyes involved were unknown, it was not possible to test for specific dyes. Instead, each sample was tested multiple times. Depending on the nature of the solvent used, different dye bands were more or less visible on the results.
Chromatography
Process
Unlike
chromatography tests in which the target dye is known, here we are
looking for the presence of dyes, whatever they may be. While we want
to see the presence of lawsone, we also want to see what else may be
there. “Henna” products may contain a wide variety of unknown
dyes, some of which react to some solvents but not others. While a
dye may show up on one type of test, it may not at all in another.
Therefore, multiple solvents and solvent strengths should be used.
Pre-trial tests were conducted to determine which solvents and solvent strengths yielded the most useful results. Solvent type and strength also affected how long the sample strips were left in the tank before being removed. Leaving samples in the tank too long can risk dyes being “bleached out” by the solvents so that results became unclear. Pre-trial tests helped to determine the best processing times.
The most conclusive
results came from sampling the pastes with the following solvents,
strengths, and times:
1. 99% isopropyl alcohol for 20 minutes
2. 1:1 mixture of isopropyl alcohol and distilled water for 15 minutes
3. 1:1 mixture of acetone and distilled water for 15 minutes
It was found that
100% acetone moved so quickly up the paper strips that no useful
results were obtained. Therefore, samples on 100% acetone will not be
reported in this article.
First, each product
was made into a paste following classic henna dye-release methods,
which will be described in more detail below. In addition, to account
for the possibility of time and acidity breaking down any non-lawsone
dyes, each product was tested again by mixing each powder with only
distilled water and testing immediately.
Below are the methods and results of each set.
Set 1: Dye
Released Paste Samples
The Lawsone
Molecule in Henna
The molecule responsible for the orange/red color achieved by henna is called lawsone. In the henna plant, lawsone precursors exist. When the plant powder is mixed with a mildly acidic mix, the precursors are released as intermediary aglycone molecules in the process that is commonly known as dye release. Aglycones can release in a water-only mixture as well but will oxidize to their final stable state very quickly. The additional hydrogen atoms present in acidic liquid allow the aglycones to stay in their intermediate state longer so that the dye can release more fully before it is applied to the hair. Lawsone in its final state is oxidized and unable to bond to keratin.
The process of oxidation is what gives henna its final color. This is why hair is often lighter and brighter initially after rinsing henna. The color deepens over the course of subsequent days. When the dye molecules in henna paste oxidize before bonding to keratin, this is called demise. This is why pure lawsone on its own is useless as a hair dye.
Mixing and Dye
Release
Each powder sample
was mixed with a prepared solution of distilled water and lemon
juice. Lemon juice was added to distilled water until the solution
showed a pH of roughly 5.5, as indicated on a litmus strip. The
resulting solution was 10 parts distilled water to 1 part lemon
juice, or 100ml distilled water and 10ml lemon juice.
Five grams of each
powder sample was mixed with the acidic solution to form a paste. The
acidic solution was added first to the AS sample to determine an
appropriate ratio for creating a paste similar to one that would be
used for coloring hair. Thus, the result was 15ml acidic solution for
each 5g powder sample*. All prepared pastes were kept in air-tight
dark glass jars to prevent excess exposure to oxygen and light.
Starting from the moment the final paste was mixed and sealed, all
samples were left at 65 degrees Fahrenheit for 12.5 hours for dye
release.
*Due to each powder sample varying in particle sift, some pastes were thinner or thicker than others. The variation in paste viscosity may have been a slight factor in test results, but not in any way that could lead to false results.
Set 1 Process
After dye release, a small amount of each sample was applied to paper chromatography strips 0.5 inches from the base of each strip. When not being used, all samples were kept refrigerated at approximately 37-40 degrees Fahrenheit. All samples were tested within 48 hours of dye release. Strips were hung in a glass chromatography tank containing a selected solvent so that the bottom edge of the strips sat just under the surface of the solvent. A glass plate was placed over the top of the tank to reduce airflow. After the determined time, the strips were removed and analyzed.
Below is a short time-lapse video showing how the sample traveled with the solvent. This particular set shows one paper strip for each sample and five strips at a time. One minute of real time is translated to one second of time in the video.
Results
These images show
results comparing all paste samples across solvents and times.
Samples are all tested numerous times, but for the sake of visual
reporting, one or two paper strips of each sample for each test were
chosen based on which were the most representative of the group.
Outliers were those whose results appeared least like the others,
most likely due to an odd variation in the paper strip causing
inconsistent solvent wicking. These were disregarded. The remainders
showed consistent results with little variation.
99% Isopropyl Alcohol for 20 Minutes
One can see that all
of these strips show mostly pale dyes that range from green to orange
to light brown, and that few show clear dye bands below the solvent
front. In the world of chromatography, most of these would not be
usable results. However, for our purposes, they are interesting. This
is because we know that lawsone does not show much color in its
intermediate aglycone state. The presence of water can cause
oxidation of the aglycone to its stable final form. So, when using an
anhydrous solvent, it would be expected that the dye does not turn up
bright orange. If it does, it might suggest that final-state
(oxidized) lawsone was present in the product, or that an orange dye
other than lawsone was added to the product.
If you are familiar
with the process of coloring your hair with henna, you will know that
the final color result takes a few days to mature. The lawsone
molecule exists in a precursor state called an aglycone when it is
mixed in an acidic paste and allowed to dye release. As long as the
paste is not exposed to oxygen, and if it is not left to demise, most
of these molecules remain aglycones. It is through the process of
bonding to the keratin in your hair, and to the oxygen molecules in
the air that they become stable lawsone molecules, and you see the
deeper color. This is also why henna paste applied to the skin is
left for several hours, and the design deepens over the following
days.
BUT, if a lower quality henna powder is “fixed” with added lawsone, that lawsone would be the stable-molecule type. This is sometimes done by henna sellers to make the product appear to have a higher lawsone content, or as an attempt to make the product more effective. Manufacturers and distributors who do not have a solid understanding of the chemistry of henna do not realize that adding lawsone will do nothing to the efficacy of the product. Stable lawsone will not bind to the hair because it has lost the hydrogens necessary to create a bond. Only the aglycone lawsone molecules released from henna powder by an acidic liquid have the ability to bind to keratin.
One can see that out
of all of the other samples, AS (shown above) is one of the palest,
nearly a yellow-green color, and almost seems to form a band below
the solvent front. Virtually no dye remains near the application
point. This indicates two things: first, that there was little to no
oxidized lawsone in the paste sample. Second, the fact that the block
of space between the paste application line and the solvent front is
so “clean” suggests that there is only one type of dye at one
point of chemical state. We know that this dye is lawsone in an
aglycone state. The more dyes involved, the muddier the strip may
appear, as it will show evidence of several observable dyes, or dyes
in several molecular states. In fact, even a product that contains a
nothing else but a blend of several different hennas would most
likely show variation due to those dyes being just slightly different
from each other.
Samples such as #2, 6, and 8 are more orange, and also show darker bands right above the sample application sites. The muddy brown band is very prominent in #6. In fact, all samples except for AS showed some level of banding that hugged the paste sample when tested with 99% isopropyl alcohol. This happens when there is a dye present which does not move well with the selected solvent and which prefers to stay low with the sample. Lack of dye movement in itself is not necessarily bad, and is simply indicative of the relationship between the dye and the solvent; however, because we can see that this did not happen with the AS sample, we can guess that those other powders contained something that AS did not.
Both #2 and #6 are particularly orange, which again suggests the presence of either added lawsone or another dye that comes up orange under these conditions. If we revisit the image of those powders prior to mixing, sample #2 especially is of a darker color. #6 and #8 are lighter, but still border on what would be a normal color for henna powder. It is possible that these three products have added lawsone or another orange dye.
#4 is very interesting, and will continue to be interesting as we go along. There is very clearly the presence of a red dye that is not lawsone. It is a vivid red which appears just above the application point. If you revisit the earlier sections of this article which show the powders and pastes, #4 is a vivid red color as both powder and paste.
#9 shows the
presence of a green-blue dye which appears as faint streaks closer to
the base of the strips. The solvent front also shows the same color
near the edges. In addition, there is a deeper, brown band that stays
just above the application point.
#7 also shows a faint green tint similar to #9, but there are no noticeable blue-green bands. Some green tones can be expected due to the presence of chlorophyll in the plant powders. Therefore, a green color does not guarantee the presence of an added dye. However, the blue-green streaks present in sample #9 are not consistent with chlorophyll.
1:1 Dilutions for 15 Minutes
In comparison, dye
bands were more visible when pastes were tested with equal parts
solvent and distilled water. This is because water causes the lawsone
dye to oxidize, turning the dye a deeper orange. In fact, the dye
stained the paper strip as it moved upward with the solvent.
Water alone was not an effective solvent because the dye did not travel with it quickly enough. Pure solvent, on the other hand, pulled the dye too quickly, leaving little to no banding, as was shown by the 99% isopropyl alcohol set. By combining distilled water and solvent, both dye oxidation and dye movement was achieved in a way that showed visible dye bands.
In the image above,
A and B labels indicate results for 1:1 isopropyl alcohol/water and
1:1 acetone/water respectively. Both were left in the tank for 15
minutes. Results were generally similar for both solvent dilutions.
In comparison to
99% isopropyl alcohol, results from 1:1 dilutions were deeper orange
with dye bands visible on most samples. While they are still faint,
the banding for lawsone can be seen as stripes of deeper color just
below the solvent front.
One can see that
the AS sample remained relatively pale, and that the dye seemed to
move more cleanly away from the application line, leaving lighter
streaks where little or no dye stained the paper.
Sample #4 clearly
shows the presence of a red dye along with lawsone. There is a bright
red band that stays near the application line. The band moved higher
in the 1:1 acetone/water sample, but both tests show separate red and
orange bands.
Sample #2 shows a
significantly darker dye which creates a nearly solid stain from
application line to solvent front. There is a band near the top which
could be lawsone. If you look closely, there is a slightly deeper
orange band that stays near the application line. This suggests that
there may be an additional orange dye along with lawsone. Sample #1
also shows a darker color in comparison to other samples, which may
suggest the presence of additional dyes.
Another notable detail is the color of the paste samples at the application line after processing. Many are bleached out as the solvent pulls the dye from the sample. The AS application line is the palest. Samples #2 and #4, however, remained very dark. This is another reason to believe that additional dyes besides lawsone were present.
Sample #9, which show blue-green dye streaks when processed with 99% isopropyl alcohol, changed significantly when processed with 1:1 dilutions. Most likely the faint blue-green dye was overpowered by the orange stain.
Set 2: Powder and
Water Samples
It is important to
note that all samples were treated as if they were 100% pure henna
powder– that they contained no additional dyes or acids, and that
they would require an acidic solution and dye release time. This was
done to keep results consistent.
However, there was
the possibility that added water-soluble dyes were present which
could have been broken down by the acidic solution, or by sitting too
long after mixing. Thus, the same process was repeated with paste
samples made from just distilled water. These samples were tested
immediately after mixing, with no wait time.
Theoretically, this
set would show very little lawsone especially in the 99% isopropyl
alcohol condition, as the henna would not have had much chance to
release lawsone in its aglycone precursor state. The 1:1 dilutions
may still provide an environment for a fast release/oxidation of
lawsone, but some additional dyes may be better seen than in Set 1,
if they were affected by the acidity and/or 12 hour wait.
For each sample, 1g
powder was mixed with 3ml distilled water. The paste was stirred
until a uniform consistency was achieved, then a small amount was
immediately applied to paper chromatography strips and tested with
the same solvents and times as Set 1. To repeat, the conditions were
as follows:
1. 99% isopropyl alcohol for 20 minutes
2. 1:1 mixture of isopropyl alcohol and distilled water for 15 minutes
3. 1:1 mixture of acetone and distilled water for 15 minutes
New paste was made for each solvent condition so that each sample was tested immediately after mixing with water.
Results
99% Isopropyl Alcohol for 20 Minutes
The image above shows results for powders mixed with distilled water only and immediately tested in 99% isopropyl alcohol. Unlike the results of dye-released pastes tested with 99% isopropyl alcohol, samples mixed with only water showed consistent bands rising to just above the application point. Less dye traveled upward with the solvent, leaving paler tones near the solvent front. Below is the image for dye-released pastes tested with 99% isopropyl alcohol for comparison.
Notable results for
this set are those of samples #2, #4, and #9.
Sample #2 appears
more vividly orange than all other samples. This occurs in both the
dye-released set and the water-only set. There is strong evidence for
an added orange colored dye, lawsone or otherwise.
Sample #4 shows the same red dye that has been apparent in all tests. Because more red dye traveled with the solvent in the water-only set in comparison to the dye-released set, this is most likely a dye which is affected by pH and/or time.
The faint green-blue dye that was noticeable in previous tests of sample #9 is particularly present in this condition. It was especially noticeable during processing. In the image below, all four strips show streaks of green-blue dye traveling upward with the solvent. The clearest is the strip second from the right.
After the strips were left in the glass tank for a full twenty minutes, the dye had collected at the solvent front. Some dyes streaks can also be seen rising just a few millimeters out of the application point. Particles of the same color can also be seen within the paste. It is clear that the green-blue dye is some form of powder or crystal mixed into the product.
1:1 Dilutions for 15 Minutes
The paper chromatography results using equal parts water and acetone, and equal parts water and isopropyl alcohol appeared very similar to the results of the dye-released pastes tested with the same dilutions. Nothing additional was revealed that was already noted in the earlier tests. This may be because the distilled water present in the diluted solvents was enough to reveal water-soluble dyes.
Discussion
The purpose of this article was first: to
observe and report the visible qualities of each product, such as the
product packaging, and the color, scent, and texture of the product
both as a dry powder and after being mixed with liquid; and second:
to determine the existence of dyes other than lawsone or lawsone
precursor molecules through the use of paper chromatography.
None of the methods used in this article can
definitively determine the safety or quality of a product. Thus, it
is not our intention to rate, review, or suggest any product outside
of the Ancient Sunrise brand. The fact that some products appeared
similar to pure henna does not mean that they were void of additives
or adulterants not shown by these tests. Paper chromatography cannot
show the presence of non-dye chemicals such as pesticides. Given
those disclaimers, let’s jump into what was observed.
The
presence of red, orange, and green dyes in some samples indicate that
those products included additional ingredients besides pure henna
powder. While all of the samples tested showed the presence of some
lawsone, many samples displayed results inconsistent with the AS
sample which we know to be 100% pure henna powder. When dye-released
pastes were tested with 99% isopropyl alcohol, all samples except AS
showed dye that did not move with the solvent, staying low to the
application line. Some samples were much darker in color, which is
inconsistent with the pale yellow-green color that would appear with
lawsone in a precursor state. It is unclear if some samples included
oxidized lawsone, and whether that lawsone was added during
manufacturing or if other conditions such as the age or storage of
the product may have led to the presence of oxidized lawsone.
Sample #2 showed a very deep orange color in all solvent conditions. When tested with 99% isopropyl alcohol, the deeper color dye was visible just above the application site. In 1:1 dilution tests, the dye traveled further up the strip, staining the strip orange from application to just under the solvent front. This suggests that there is an added water-soluble orange dye present in sample #2.
Blue-green dye was visible in sample #9 when tested with 99% isopropyl alcohol. In diluted solvent conditions, the blue-green dye was no longer visible. This type of dye was most likely added to give the powder a greener color, rather than to affect the color outcome on the hair.
Because there is a marketing claim that a greener henna powder is fresher, adding green dye to henna powder is not an uncommon practice. Detailed information about henna powders “polished” with green dye can be found on page 39 of Chapter Four: Henna Science and Microscopy. Ironically enough, sample #9 was among the darker colored powders and pastes in the group, so the addition of green dye did not seem to do what it intended. Below is an image at 60x magnification of a henna powder which shows added green dye.
Limitations
and Considerations
Paper
chromatography is only one type of chromatography, and not as exact
as methods accessible in a certified laboratory. High-performance
thin-layer chromatography, for example, is capable of separating dyes
into much clearer bands, and then a scientist can calculate and
compare the distance of those bands between the application point and
solvent front to determine more about the nature of each dye. In many
cases, reactants can be applied to chromatography results to cause
substances to be visible if they are not already. Access to such
methods would have been beneficial. An example of high-performance
thin-layer chromatography can bee seen on page 22 in Henna
Science and Microscopy.
Additionally, some
samples varied in age, which can affect the quality of a powder to
some degree. That being said, pure henna products have a shelf life
of several years as long as they are kept sealed and in a cool, dry
environment. Because the products tested may have contained
additional unknown ingredients, it is difficult to say whether those
specific non-henna ingredients may have broken down or changed with
time.
Commercial hair dye companies are slowly learning a painful secret: “Fast, easy, and cheap” has been beneficial for business for just over a century, but will not be sustainable in the coming decades.
The majority of permanent and semi-permanent hair dyes available in stores and used in salons contain para-phenylenediamine (PPD). PPD, a coal-tar derivative dye, was first used as a commercial fur dye until consumers quickly realized that they could use it on their own hair [1]. PPD-based hair dyes entered the market at the turn of the 20th century. Oxidative hair dyes could be made in a range of colors. The products were easy to use and worked quickly. The color result was relatively permanent. These features made PPD dyes very attractive.
Oscar Wilde was one of the first public figures believed to be sensitized to PPD. Repeated exposures, and/or exposures to high concentrations of PPD lead to sensitization and allergic reaction. This can happen to anyone. As with other allergens, a person can be born allergic to PPD, or that person can develop a sensitivity after exposure. Only about 1.5% of the population is born allergic to PPD. The rest are sensitized through exposure. Kligman’s study showed that 100% of subjects developed a sensitization to PPD after five or fewer patch tests of a 10% PPD mixture [2]. Although sensitization rates vary depending on demographics, country, and gender, conservative estimates say around the numbers are around 6.2% in North America, 4% in Europe, and 4.3% in Asia [3].
The PPD Era
Prior to 1934, there was no restriction on the concentration of para-phenylenediamine allowed in beauty products. It was even in eyelash tints, which led to corneal ulcerations and conjunctivitis [4]. One such product, LashLure, ended up in an installation at the 1933 Chicago world’s fair called “The Chamber of Horrors.” This installation, set up by the FDA, exposed dangerous products. Although doctors, manufacturers, and some consumers were aware of the dangers of PPD hair dyes from the very beginning, they continue to be sold in the United States. While products containing higher than 6% PPD are now illegal, it is still easy enough to find highly concentrated, powdered PPD hair dye products online and in local ethnic grocery stores. Certain countries such as France, Germany, and Sweden have banned PPD products altogether [5].
An advertisement for hair dye from 1885.
PPD sensitization rates have risen. It is projected that by 2030, about 16% of the western population will be sensitized [6]. This means that fewer people will be able to use oxidative hair dyes and other products containing PPD; hair dye companies will see a loss in their customer base. These companies will also see increased reports of injury, and increasing numbers of lawsuits.
Commercial hair dye companies are now showing interest in returning to a practice that has existed for thousands of years: Dyeing hair with henna and other plant dye powders. For example, L’Oreal recently announced its plans to release a line called Botanea, an all-natural and vegan hair dye line based on henna, indigo, and cassia. Other companies have also produced and marketed henna and plant-based dye products to varying degrees of success.
Whether this “new” return to plant dye powders will be successful to cosmetics corporations will depend highly on the ways they choose to produce and market the product, and how they plan to engage a population which has been dependent on oxidative dyes for so long. Not only will it require these companies to learn the science behind this completely different technique, but to also admit and come to terms with the danger of PPD which they have denied for over a hundred years. Finally, it will also call for the development of henna farms and mills in areas where henna crops will thrive, and the establishment of high standards for exported products.
PPD Sensitization as an Epidemic
In the past decades, we have seen a rise in the rate of PPD sensitization. Not only are more people developing reactions to PPD, but their ages are getting younger. This is correlated with the popularity of “black henna” tattoos in tourist areas, as well as the increase of young people using hair dyes [7]. Catherine Cartwright-Jones, Ph.D. explores this epidemic in detail in her dissertation, “The Geographies of the Black Henna Meme Organism and the Epidemic of Para-phenylenediamine Sensitization: A Qualitative History.”
“Black henna” is nothing but a concentrated PPD hair dye mixture, applied directly to the skin. Hair dyes in the United States contain up to 6% PPD. These “black henna” mixtures can contain 25% PPD concentration or higher, enough to sensitize a person within one application. The use of PPD on the skin is illegal in the United States, but “black henna” stalls are very common in tourist areas, and the law is not actively enforced.
The practice of using concentrated hair dye to create designs on the skin began in North Africa in the 1970s, and by the 1990s it was popular in western tourist destinations such as resorts, amusement parks, and boardwalks. When a child or young adult gets a “black henna tattoo” while on vacation, then, years later, uses a commercial hair dye containing PPD, they can experience a reaction serious enough to land them in the hospital. To learn more about PPD sensitization, read What You Need to Know about Para-Phenylenediamine (PPD).
These powdered hair dyes contain concentrated PPD and are easily available online and in local stores despite restrictions.
PPD is also used in printing, the manufacturing of black rubber, and many other industries and products. From the start, doctors and scientists were concerned about the negative effects of PPD and warned consumers of its dangers [8]. However, on November 2, 1934, the FDA struck up an agreement that hair dyes could contain up to a 6% concentration of PPD as long as the packaging contained adequate warning. Since then, the vast majority of permanent and semi-permanent hair dyes sold in stores and used in salons contain PPD.
Under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FD&C Act), a law passed by Congress, color additives must be approved by FDA for their intended use before they are used in FDA-regulated products, including cosmetics. Other cosmetic ingredients do not need FDA approval. FDA can take action against a cosmetic on the market if it is harmful to consumers when used in the customary or expected way and used according to labeled directions.
How the law treats coal-tar hair dyes:
FDA cannot take action against a coal-tar hair dye, as long as the label includes a special caution statement and the product comes with adequate directions for consumers to do a skin test before they dye their hair. This is the caution statement: Caution – This product contains ingredients which may cause skin irritation on certain individuals and a preliminary test according to accompanying directions should first be made. This product must not be used for dyeing the eyelashes or eyebrows; to do so may cause blindness. (FD&C Act, 601(a))
Coal-tar hair dyes, unlike color additives in general, do not need FDA approval. (FD&C Act, 601(e)).”
What this means is that companies producing hair dyes containing 6% PPD or less, as long as they provide adequate warning and instructions for patch testing, are relatively well protected from injury suits. Despite numerous serious reactions to hair dye, and despite it being well-documented that PPD is a highly sensitizing compound responsible for the vast majority of hair dye allergies, these companies are widely immune to legal repercussions.
Taking The Hair Dye Giants to Court
There have been a number of attempts at lawsuits and class action suits against certain companies, such as several recent cases against Just For Men. Those involved in the class action suit against Just For Men believed that the company was intentionally targeting men of color in the marketing of their Jet Black dye, which contained a high level of PPD. Other cases posited that the patch test instructions were not sufficient for properly determining sensitivity prior to applying the dye.
The problem with patch-testing is that PPD often causes a delayed hypersensitivity reaction whose onset may not occur until several days after the test. Most patch tests advise waiting 24 hours. Some people experience no reaction following their first application, but have been sensitized to future reactions. This lack of initial reaction leads to serious consequences when that person, unaware of their new allergy, is exposed to PPD again. Many people who experience severe reactions to hair dye had gotten a “black henna” tattoo earlier in their life. In the case of products sold to men for hair and beard use, a consumer may find that they do not react when conducting a patch test on the inner arm, but experience a reaction on their face, where the skin is thin, sensitive, and potentially abraded from grooming.
The required warning and patch test advisory on a package of Just For Men hair and beard dye.
Lawyers defending hair dye companies have used PPD’s delayed reaction to their advantage, by insisting that there is no way to tell for sure whether the product caused the reaction, if the reaction did not appear until several days after the customer used the product.
One of the first legal suits against a hair-dye company was that of hairdresser Pauline Karr against Inecto Notox Rapid in 1926. Notox was aggressively marketed as a safe and harmless dye which could be easily applied at home. Despite the fact that companies, consumers, and doctors were already aware of the dangers of PPD, Inecto and other companies did not disclose their products ingredients; at that time, they were not legally required to do so, as the formula was protected as a trade secret.
The dye dripped onto Karr’s finger, staining it black, and she experienced a severe reaction twelve hours later. Karr lost the use of that finger, and sued Inecto. The company won on appeal. Inecto’s lawyers argued that there was no way to prove that the product itself caused the reaction that occurred twelve hours later, and that the company was so large and successful, with thousands of products sold, that there was no way that the dye could be unsafe. Because the company claimed that its formula was the reason for its success, they believed that they were under no obligation to divulge the dye’s ingredients.
This reasoning was used time and time again in following suits. Hair dye companies claim that any injury cannot be reasonably linked to the use of the product itself, and that if any injury does come about from the product, it must be due to misuse on the consumer’s part. Now with the FDA’s stance, hair dye companies are safe from legal repercussion as long as the dye contains 6% or less PPD, and they have adequate warnings on their product labels.
In some rare cases, the plaintiff wins against the company, such as Falk vs. Inecto in 1927. Falk’s lawyer claimed that Inecto Notox Rapid hair dye contained toxic and dangerous substances and that the company was negligent in marketing it as a safe, non-toxic product.
NOTOX “assures absolute naturalness” and claims to be “composed of mild organic ingredients.”
The End of the PPD Hair Dye Era
What commercial hair dye companies are not immune to, however, is a loss in customer base. It is projected that by 2030, about 16% of the adult western population will be sensitized to PPD. 7% of the population will experience a reaction serious enough to require hospitalization [6]. People working in industries where they are regularly exposed to PPD, such as hair styling, fur-dyeing, black rubber manufacturing, and printing, are at higher risk of sensitization. Many hair stylists have had to quit after no longer being able to handle hair dyes. Those who develop a sensitization to PPD have it for life, and will experience reactions to products outside of hair dye, which contain PPD or ingredients involved in cross-reactions.
These companies are not ignorant of the facts. They know that people experience reactions after using hair dye containing PPD. They know that sensitization to hair dye is related to “black henna” tattoos. PPD was named allergen of the year in 2006. Scientists and doctors have long studied the connection between hair dye and contact dermatitis, and delayed-reaction sensitization. Despite this, the beauty industry giants hire their own researchers to put out articles insisting that PPD is safe [9].
Henna, Cassia, and Indigo plant dye powders have been used to naturally color the hair for thousands of years. When used in the right ratios, these three plant powders can produce an infinite range of natural hair colors, from blonde to jet black. Henna was particularly popular during La Belle Epoque– the end of the 1800s and the beginning of the 1900s. Artists like Toulouse Lautrec painted women with beautifully vivid red hair. Hennaed hair was seen as sensual and exotic.
Henna was upstaged by PPD hair dyes during the mid-1900s, as PPD was cheap, easy to use, and provided fast results. Hair dye companies selling henna attempted to make the process easier for the western customer base by creating compound henna products. These products contained metallic salts and other additives meant to alter the color results and make up for low-quality plant powders. As henna powder imports decreased during WWI and WWII, compound henna products were a way to cheapen the product. These additives had nasty effects, especially when oxidative hair dyes or lighteners were applied over hair that was previously dyed with compound henna. Thus, henna’s reputation was sullied. Henna was associated with dirtiness, backwardness, and brassy, orange hair. Many stylists associate still these negative effects with henna itself, rather than the additives contained in compound henna. The use of pure plant powders as hair dye is not taught in cosmetology schools, while the negative bias toward henna is perpetuated. It is common for stylists to refuse to work on hair that has been hennaed.
But the customer base for commercial hair dyes is shrinking as PPD sensitization spreads. Companies have responded by creating and marketing hair dyes that are “PPD free.” These dyes, though they do not contain para-phenylenediamine, use a molecularly similar ingredient instead, such as para-toluenediamine. Para-toluenediamine is another coal-tar dye within the same molecular family. Is still sensitizing, though less so. Whether a person is sensitive to PPD or PTD, cross-sensitization will still occur. This means that many “PPD free” hair dyes are still unsafe, especially for those who have a PPD sensitivity. PPD sensitivities can also lead to cross-reactions with a number of other materials, such as certain fabric dyes, synthetic fragrances, anesthetics,
PPD also goes by a number of different names. Companies may list para-phenylenediamine under a lesser-known name to make their product appear safer. Here are alternative names for PPD:
PPDA
Phenylenediamine base
p-Phenylenediamine
4-Phenylenediamine
1,4-Phenylenediamine
4-Benzenediamine
1,4-Benzenediamine
para-Diaminobenzene (p-Diaminobenzene)
para-Aminoaniline (p-Aminoaniline) [10]
Other consumers, whether or not they have a PPD allergy, are simply looking for more natural, or “chemical free” products. We are entering an era in which consumers are more health-conscious, more environmentally-conscious, and more wary of large corporations. People no longer want to blindly buy products, but instead choose to do research, read reviews, and read labels. Companies respond by altering their packaging, releasing new products that appear to be healthier, safer, or containing an exotic, natural ingredient. However, there is no regulation on words like, “natural,” or “pure.” Just because a product contains a natural ingredient does not make it any safer. In the same logic, one could add a plant extract to antifreeze and call it “natural.”
An old shampoo advertisement marketing new “exotic formulas.”
Certain cosmetic companies are now looking into attempting what Ancient Sunrise® has done for years: providing pure plant powder hair dye. If done correctly, this change can be a win in the battle against PPD. But the emphasis is on correctly. We have already seen what happens when henna is manipulated with additives for the sake of “cheap and easy.” Henna does not work well with short-cuts. If these companies wish to be successful, they must take the time to understand the art, science, and culture of the natural hair dye world. Failing to do so will result in a waste of time and resources, and potentially an additional blow to the reputation of henna for hair.
What Must Happen For A Successful Transition
Here is what cosmetic companies will need to understand in order to bring henna for hair into the mainstream market:
1. Henna Has its Own Science That Cannot Be Messed With
In their attempts to sell henna, the biggest mistake that commercial hair dye companies fall into time and time again is their attempt to make it quicker and easier to use. They assume that western consumers want simple, quick-fix solutions and are incapable of using a product that requires too many steps.
We have seen the damage that compound henna products have done, both to the hair of the consumer, and to the reputation of henna. Adding metallic salts to henna will not work. “Henna” products that are sold as a liquid or cream are anything but henna. They may contain some henna (or henna extract, whatever that means), but it is unlikely that the plant dye is doing much of the work. Many of these products contain commercial dyes, either coal-tar derived, or azo-dyes. Any natural plant ingredient is there to make the product seem healthier, whether or not the ingredient is even necessary or useful in hair dye. All of the exotic oils, dried flowers, and cocoa powder in the world cannot fix a formula based on bad science.
Other companies sell pre-mixed powders containing henna, indigo, cassia, and other plant ingredients all combined into one. These products may recommend mixing the powder with hot water. This will not work because henna and indigo require different dye-release processes to work effectively. Henna must be dye-released with a mildly acidic liquid and left at room temperature for several hours before application. Indigo must be mixed with a neutral or slightly alkaline liquid, and used right away. Thus, a pre-mixed product mixed with hot water will yield undesired results, and fade rapidly.
Some companies offer oil-based “bars” that contain henna and other plant dyes, and are meant to be mixed with water and melted down. Again, these products are an example of bad science. Oil prevents the dye molecules from binding to the hair shaft. The result is, again, far from the desired color and quick to fade.
Plant dye powders cannot be mixed. Extra ingredients, either “chemical” or “natural,” are not necessary. The process cannot be sped up. Cutting corners leads to inferior results. Companies must understand that if they want to bring henna and natural hair dye back to the market in an effective and successful way, they must accept that consumers are capable of and willing to learn the science. Ancient Sunrise® has been doing this for years. Its customer base continues to grow. By providing well-researched resources, attentive customer support, and pure, unadulterated plant dye powders, Ancient Sunrise® has built a community of educated consumers who enjoy healthy, PPD-free color.
2. Henna for Hair is Highly Individualized
It will not work to force henna for hair into a one-size-fits-all model. Henna, indigo, and cassia all create a translucent stain on the hair. Unlike oxidative dyes which can lift the hair color with ammonia and peroxide, plant dyes cannot cause the hair to be any lighter. Thus, the result is highly dependent on each person’s initial hair color.
Other factors such as a person’s hair texture and condition, body chemistry, local water supply, and personal lifestyle may also affect color results. Therefore, it will not work to slap a color swatch onto a package and claim that that is the result a customer should expect. While many henna-users achieve their desired results within the first or second try, others will need to adjust their recipes and techniques until they find what works best for them.
Henna is at the center of most natural hair dye mixes. Alone, it stains light hair red, copper, or auburn. Indigo is used alongside henna to create brunette shades. It can also be applied separately after henna to dye the hair black. Cassia adds golden tones and is the primary dye in blond mixes. To learn more about plant dyes for hair, read Ancient Sunrise® Chapter 5: Plants that Dye Hair.
Off-the-shelf home hair dye kits normally contain two or more bottles containing liquids that are to be combined and then applied. The process does not require much thought on the part of the customer. Henna for hair, on the other hand, involves combining up to three types of plant dye powders in a specific ratio to achieve a certain color. These powders must be packaged individually. When companies try to create henna-based products that mimic the easy application process of commercial hair dyes, the results are inferior.
Ancient Sunrise® Henna for Hair kits provide individually packaged plant dye powders at the correct ratios to achieve a wide range of natural colors.
Because individual differences add so many variables to hennaing hair, both companies and consumers must be aware that it takes patience and communication to achieve the best results. If a customer simply picks up a henna for hair product off the shelf, tries it, and doesn’t like the results, they may never try henna again. They might never know why it didn’t work the way they wanted it to, and what they could have done differently to get the result they wanted.
This is why it essential to create a community of knowledgeable henna-users, and to have this community become part of the mainstream hair and beauty culture. Such communities exist for African-textured hair, for people who grow their hair long, for people who abstain from commercial shampoos, and so on. The Ancient Sunrise® Henna group on Facebook is very active and has over 3750 members. This number increases daily. In this group, members share before and after photos, ask questions, and guide each other. When a question is particularly specific or complex, the Ancient Sunrise® customer service representatives act as the “experts”. They are trained in the science of henna for hair in such a way that they can create individualized mix recipes and offer advice, based on an assessment of a customer’s desires, troubles, and hair history.
Henna for hair is not possible without this kind of support system. Hennaing one’s hair was once common knowledge. Now, people may perm, bleach, and color their own hair at home using store-bought products, but they are largely unfamiliar with mixing and applying plant dye powders. Hair stylists have always functioned as ambassadors between the professional world of beauty, and the day-to-day consumer. If henna is to be successful, it will need to be taught to hair stylists in the same way oxidative dyes are taught. The bias against henna must end, and be replaced with more accurate information. If not, misinformation will spread and distrust will grow between stylists, and consumers who have chosen to switch to henna. The following section will suggest ways in which stylists can become leaders in the switch to plant dyes.
3. Changing the Culture Should Start with Stylists
Henna’s bad reputation continues to live on through the misinformation taught to and spread by hair stylists. This is not the stylists’ fault. Cosmetology texts contain the same out-of-date information in regards to henna that they have for decades. Cosmetologists come to know this misinformation as fact. The dangers associated with henna come from compound henna, where the culprits are metallic salts, not the henna itself. Compound henna products are, indeed, an absolute nightmare for the hair. Now, many stylists still believe that henna damages the hair, that it coats the hair and makes it brittle, and that the hair cannot be lightened once hennaed. In reality, henna is much safer and healthier for the hair. Oxidative dyes use chemicals to break past the keratin cuticle to deposit dye and to destroy melanin cells, thereby weakening both the internal and external structure of the hair strand [11, 12]. Henna, indigo, and cassia deposit dye that binds to the keratin at the outer layers of the strand, leaving the structure not only intact, but reinforced.
Time and time again, Ancient Sunrise® henna for hair users report that their stylists react negatively upon hearing that they use henna. They will scold their clients and try to persuade them to stop. Some stylists will refuse to work on hair that has been dyed with henna. This is understandable; because of the lack of regulation on products labeled as “henna,” it is nearly impossible to determine if the product the client previously used was truly safe, or whether it would react with other chemicals. While Ancient Sunrise® plant dye powders are all subjected to rigorous lab tests to ensure purity and safety, the same cannot be guaranteed by other brands.
Many stylists, however, see the wonderful color and condition of our clients’ hair and begin to develop an interest in henna. Several stylists are now offering Ancient Sunrise® henna for hair services in their own salons. Some have ceased using oxidative dyes altogether, and work exclusively with henna and other plant dyes. Ancient Sunrise® offers free resources and training, as well as a discount to salons and stylists who use our products in their work.
Lisa Marchesi-Hunter offers Ancient Sunrise® plant dye services in her salon in Sedona, Arizona. She and her client have given permission for the use of this image.
PPD sensitization occurs at high rates in the cosmetology industry because stylists expose themselves to hair dye regularly [13]. Many develop such severe reactions that they are no longer able to work as stylists. Henna for hair offers a unique opportunity for stylists who have been sensitized to PPD to continue doing what they love without the risk of allergic reaction. By training stylists in the use of plant dyes, not only will salons be able to offer new services to maintain and build their clientele, but they will be able to employ talented individuals who might otherwise have been forced to find new work.
Stylists have a special and unique relationship with their clients. They connect at a personal level, working with both the client’s appearance and emotions. The clients see them as friends, and also trust their knowledge of hair and beauty. Studies have been done on the use of salons and barbershops as venues for discussing other health issues, such as cardiovascular disease and prostate cancer [14, 15]. It is not absurd, then, to imagine that stylists can have discussions with their clients about switching from oxidative dyes to plant-based dyes, if the client is concerned about sensitization. Now, many doctors who are familiar with the benefits of henna recommend it to their patients who have hair dye allergies. However many of these patients have a hard time finding good products and solid information, and stylists who are willing to help them apply it. It will be of great benefit for more stylists to explore and embrace natural dyes.
4. Henna for Hair Will Require Education and A Shift in Culture
The world of beauty is fast-paced, and constantly innovating. Both professionals and customers are quick to pick up on new styles, products, and techniques. Social media helps to spread new trends quickly. While only a few years ago many people would have never heard of the terms, balayage, or ombré, these are now highly sought-after styles, illustrated by thousands of images on the internet and social media sites. Special communities share and discuss techniques for a variety of hair textures and needs. The same is happening now for henna, and must continue into the mainstream, if hair dye companies wish to be successful in selling henna, indigo, and cassia plant dye powders.
This is because the process of dyeing hair with plant dye powders cannot easily fit into a small pamphlet that accompanies a product. The current model of the store-bought hair dye market sets the company as the “expert” of knowledge that is seemingly too complicated for the average customer. The company is trusted to “know what is best” for the consumer, so the consumer can simply buy a product and apply it without question. With henna, a company cannot sell a secret formula; it must provide individually packaged, pure plant powders, along with the correct resources to help the consumer learn how to use them. It is the difference between selling a can of soup, and selling the raw ingredients and a solid recipe.
Henna for hair communities encourage consumers to take knowledge into their own hands. These customers want to know what they are putting on their bodies, and exactly how to create their desired look. They want to know not only how to do it, but how it works and why it works. This new model replaces the instructional pamphlet with active learning and interpersonal interactions. Henna users use resources and each other to perfect their techniques. Passive consumption is replaced with educated consumers making active decisions based on the information they share and seek out.
Where henna was originally used, women spent entire days together at public bathhouses where they would gather to clean themselves, relax, chat, and henna their hair. These techniques were passed from person to person, and from mother to child. Now, as people bathe and groom alone, the internet takes the place as the 21st century bathhouse.
If training is made available to stylists, either through elective additional programs, or within the cosmetology curriculum, stylists can then become trusted experts and ambassadors for plant dyes. This will require that the outdated misconceptions about henna be replaced with up-to-date information. This information is already freely available through Ancient Sunrise®. We have recently designed a training program which can visit salons interested in using the brand, educating stylists on the science and technique over the course of a few days. This program is adaptable to the size and needs of each individual business. The price is dependent on instructors’ time, materials, and travel costs.
Gwyn presents to a salon company in Italy. Photo credit: Maria Moore
As the more salons begin to offer natural, safe alternatives to PPD-based hair dyes, others will follow suit in order to compete in this new market. It is very likely that, if done correctly, plant-based hair dyeing will become commonplace in the hair styling industry. One day, the use of oxidative hair dyes may be an old-fashioned, backward practice.
5. Mainstreaming Henna Will Require a Reliable Source of High-Quality Product
If henna is to replace PPD dyes in the western market, there will need to be enough product to meet demands. Ideally, henna for hair should be regulated to ensure quality, consistency, and safety. The product should have to meet a standard for sift quality, as well as a standard for maximum allowable pesticides, added dyes, mineral content, and other chemical adulterants (ideally, this maximum should be close to zero). Quality regulation is essential because the reputation of henna has already been tainted by decades of bad product. Stylists and consumers must trust that these products are safe, that they will not damage their hair, and that they will not interact with other products in destructive ways. Pure henna can be lightened with chemical lightening agents. It can be dyed over with oxidative dyes. Adulterated henna products cannot.
Meeting a high demand for quality product will require the existence of enough farms and milling facilities that operate within the expected standards. Henna is grown in semi-arid climates. Countries such as India, Iran, Yemen, Sudan, and Morocco have grown and produced henna. Currently, the majority of exported henna comes from the Rajasthan area of India. Political, economic, and agricultural factors have caused many countries to decrease production and cease exporting henna. A growth in demand from the western market could greatly boost the agricultural economy of those nations interested in growing and exporting henna.
Henna is a hardy, drought-tolerant crop which does not require pesticides to thrive. The life of a henna shrub is about fifty years. Because only the leaves are harvested, the crop remains in the soil year after year. The plant’s dense, twisting root system prevents soil erosion. Henna is an ideal crop to grow in the southern boundary Sahel desert in Africa, where it can add to the “green wall” project preventing desert spread. As this region has ideal conditions for henna crops, it can present a great economic opportunity for those who live and work there. Building the henna industry there will require working with locals to establish farms and mills, and maintaining quality standards.
Currently, there are no regulations on products labeled “henna” coming into the United States. Much of the henna powder currently sold for hair is poorly sifted, stale, low dye-content henna, with large plant particulates, sand, and other debris. This makes the henna difficult to apply and rinse cleanly. Hair is left tangled and with poor color results. As stated before, many products contain additional chemical adulterants.
Henna is permitted by the FDA only as a hair dye, and not for use on skin. It will be beneficial to legalize pure henna plant powder for all uses and to set up regulations based on lab testing. This way, the United States can ensure that the product entering the country is free of harmful adulterants, and that only products that meet these standards can be sold as henna. These standards should include panels for heavy metals, metallic salts, minerals, and pesticides. Additional testing can regulate sift quality. Legalization and regulation will lead to safer products and wider availability.
A henna plant and its root system.
Final Notes
PPD sensitization is rising at a rate that will soon make the current hair dye industry unsustainable. A transition from oxidative hair dyes to pure plant dyes within the mainstream market is definitely possible, but it will require earnest effort on the part of those companies which seek to make it happen.
Hair dye companies will have to completely un-learn their previous ideas of what a hair dye is, and what their consumer expects a hair dye to be. They must engage with stylists and consumers to educate them on products and techniques which are far different from what is commonly used today. They must take the time to establish farms and facilities which are capable of putting out high-quality product.
Doing so will allow for more people to dye their hair safely and with beautiful, damage-free results. It will provide alternatives for both consumers and stylists who are sensitized to PPD. It will increase opportunities for economic development in those regions suitable for growing henna, and protect those regions from desert spread. It will prevent future allergies and injuries. Switching to henna is a common-sense, feasible solution, but one that must be executed with the utmost deliberation.
References
[1] Ashraf, Waseem, Shiela Dawling, and Lew J. Farrow. “Systemic paraphenylenediamine (PPD) poisoning: a case report and review.” Human & experimental toxicology 13, no. 3 (1994): 167-170.
[2] Kligman, Albert M. “The identification of contact allergens by human assay: III. The maximization test: A procedure for screening and rating contact sensitizers.” Journal of Investigative Dermatology 47, no. 5 (1966): 393-409.
[3] Mukkanna, Krishna Sumanth, Natalie M. Stone, and John R. Ingram. “Para-phenylenediamine allergy: current perspectives on diagnosis and management.” Journal of asthma and allergy 10 (2017): 9
[4] McCally, A. W., A. G. Farmer, and E. C. Loomis. “Corneal ulceration following use of Lash-Lure.” Journal of the American Medical Association 101, no. 20 (1933): 1560-1561.
[5] Brancaccio, Ronald R., Lance H. Brown, Young Tae Chang, Joshua P. Fogelman, Erick A. Mafong, and David E. Cohen. “Identification and quantification of para-phenylenediamine in a temporary black henna tattoo.” American Journal of Contact Dermatitis 13, no. 1 (2002): 15-18.
[6] Smith, Vanessa M., Sheila M. Clark, and Mark Wilkinson. “Allergic contact dermatitis in children: trends in allergens, 10 years on. A retrospective study of 500 children tested between 2005 and 2014 in one UK centre.” Contact dermatitis 74, no. 1 (2016): 37-43.
[7] McFadden, John P., Ian R. White, Peter J. Frosch, Heidi Sosted, Jenne D. Johansen, and Torkil Menne. “Allergy to hair dye.” (2007): 220-220.
[8] Wilbert, Martin I. “Cosmetics as Drugs: A Review of Some of the Reported Harmful Effects of the Ordinary Constituents of Widely Used Cosmetics.” Public Health Reports (1896-1970) (1915): 3059-3066.
[9] Nohynek, Gerhard J., Rolf Fautz, Florence Benech-Kieffer, and Herve Toutain. “Toxicity and human health risk of hair dyes.” Food and Chemical Toxicology 42, no. 4 (2004): 517-543.
[10] DermNet, N. Z. “Allergy to Paraphenylenediamine.” (2005).
[11]Ahn, Hyung Jin, and Won‐Soo Lee. “An ultrastuctural study of hair fiber damage and restoration following treatment with permanent hair dye.” International journal of dermatology 41, no. 2 (2002): 88-92.
[12] Sinclair, Rodney D. “Healthy hair: what is it?.” In Journal of investigative dermatology symposium proceedings, vol. 12, no. 2, pp. 2-5. Elsevier, 2007.
[13]Lind, Marie-Louise, Anders Boman, Jan Sollenberg, Stina Johnsson, Gunnel Hagelthorn, and Birgitta Meding. “Occupational dermal exposure to permanent hair dyes among hairdressers.” Annals of occupational hygiene 49, no. 6 (2005): 473-480.
[14] Releford, Bill J., Stanley K. Frencher Jr, Antronette K. Yancey, and Keith Norris. “Cardiovascular disease control through barbershops: design of a nationwide outreach program.” Journal of the National Medical Association 102, no. 4 (2010): 336.
[15] Luque, John S., Siddhartha Roy, Yelena N. Tarasenko, Levi Ross, Jarrett Johnson, and Clement K. Gwede. “Feasibility study of engaging barbershops for prostate cancer education in rural African-American communities.” Journal of Cancer Education 30, no. 4 (2015): 623-628.
Lemon juice is very commonly used as the acidic liquid for dye-releasing henna. It is cheap, easy to find, and definitely acidic enough for a good dye release. Many people swear by it, but just as many say that they can’t use it. This is because lemon juice can be drying and irritating for many.
In fact, whenever someone asks why their scalp is itching after a henna application, my first question automatically is, “What did you mix it with?” and 90% of the time, the answer is lemon juice. Later, the customer is thrilled to find that, after switching to another acid, they never experience that problem again.
Lemon juice is also often the culprit behind hennaed hair that became darker than desired. A lemon juice mix yields bright orange tones at first, but the stain oxidizes very dark over time.
This is not to say that lemon juice is unsuitable for henna mixes, or that it should be avoided at all costs; for many people, it is just fine. In fact, I use it most of the time in my own mixes. I am not particularly sensitive to it, and the results work for my needs. For others, however, some discomfort or unwanted results can be avoided by choosing a different acid
If you use lemon juice in your henna mix, or are considering trying it, this article will cover a few things you may want to be aware of. You can then decide whether you would rather use a different acidic liquid or powder.
Note on Lime Juice: All of the following applies the same, and more so, to limes and lime juice. Limes are much harsher, and more likely to cause irritation and photo-sensitivity than lemons. Honestly, just don’t use lime juice. If your heart is set on limes, dilute it generously.
Lemon Juice May Lead to Irritated Skin and Dry-Feeling Hair
As mentioned earlier, lemon juice is a very common cause of itchy scalps post-hennaing. Some people are initially alarmed, and misinterpret this as an allergic reaction to the henna product. While henna allergies do happen, they are extremely rare. Citrus sensitivity, on the other hand, is much more common. To learn more about allergies in relation to plant dye powders, click here.
The low pH of undiluted lemon juice can bother the skin, especially for those with sensitive skin, and especially when henna paste is left on for several hours. The result is dry, irritated skin and rough-feeling hair. The crunchy texture in the hair is temporary, as the cuticles on the hair shaft are raised after a henna treatment, and will settle down in the following days. Cold water and conditioner can help the hair become smooth more quickly.
A henna mix does not need to be extremely acidic in order to achieve dye release. A pH of 4.5 is sufficient. Lemon juice has a pH of 2.3. Consider diluting lemon juice with three or four parts distilled water. Milder juices like apple and cranberry work just as well without needing to be diluted. Ancient Sunrise® offers several fruit acid powders to suit a variety of hair types and needs. Know that each fruit juice or acid powder may yield different effects on the resulting color. Click here for more information on henna and acidic mixes.
Hair may feel rough after henna because dye molecules are settling into place. A very acidic mixture, such as one with undiluted lemon juice, may make this feeling more noticeable.
Lemon Juice Will Make Hennaed Hair Darker, Not Lighter
Lemon juice is a popular way subtly bleach the hair. For those with lighter hair colors, spritzing the hair with lemon juice prior to going out into the sun can bring out highlights. One can also find endless DIY hair treatments involving lemon juice and claiming to lighten hair.
However, using lemon juice in a henna mix has the opposite effect. Lemon juice mixes result in vivid, fiery results at first, but the color is known to oxidize to darker and darker shades over time. I’ve spoken to many people who loved their hennaed hair color at first, but found that it got much too dark over time. The most common mistakes, often used in conjunction, were a) using lemon juice; b) reapplying henna to the entire length of the hair; c) reapplying too often, and d) using heated styling tools. To learn about other causes of darkening and how to prevent it, read this article.
Highly acidic mixes will continue to oxidize after the initial couple of weeks, leading to increasingly dark results after several months or years.
As a rule of thumb, very low pH liquids will all do a similar thing with henna: Initial stains will be noticeably bright, and then the color will deepen continually over time. The more acidic the mix, the greater the difference between first rinse and final oxidation. Many people who use lemon juice may only be aware of the first part, and then later become upset that their hair no longer has that vivid brightness that it once did when they just began using henna. Additionally, the only effective way to lighten hennaed hair is to bleach it.
For a brighter, lighter result that does not oxidize, Ancient Sunrise® Copperberry fruit acid powder works really well. It is high in antioxidants that keep darkening at bay. Ancient Sunrise® Kristalovino fruit acid powder also causes brighter results, and is very gentle on sensitive skin.
Some people (including me), are fully aware that lemon juice causes darker results over time, and use it for that purpose. But to be honest, there are much faster ways to push henna to a deep red without having to wait through the bright orange period. Ancient Sunrise® Malluma Kristalovino fruit acid powder creates deep auburn results and is very gentle on the skin. Ancient Sunrise® Nightfall Rose powder is high in anthocyanins, which gives a cooler tone to henna.
Henna does not fade over time. It darkens. Highly acidic mixes will darken more over time. Mixes that are high in antioxidants can prevent darkening.
Citrus Can Cause Photo-sensitivity
Citrus oils are phototoxic. They make the skin more sensitive to sunlight. This can result in sunburns in situations when one would not normally expect to be burned. Especially in the case of fresh-squeezed lemon juice, you may inadvertently cause photo-sensitivity to your scalp by using a henna mix with lemon juice. This is definitely the case with lime juice. You may have heard of people suffering reactions after getting a bit of margarita on themselves while enjoying the sun. This does happen.
On the other hand, henna has some great natural UV protective qualities, and your hair will provide some barrier between your scalp and the sun. In any case, if you have particularly photosensitive skin, or are sensitive to citrus juices and oils, you may want to consider using a different fruit acid.
What To Use Instead
Lemon juice will always be a staple in the henna world, but it’s always good to have options. As I mentioned before, there are numerous other fruit juices and fruit acid powders which will work just as well, or better, than lemon juice.
If you’re set on using lemon, consider diluting it. Full-strength lemon juice is more acidic than what is necessary to dye-release henna. As long as the liquid tastes mildly tart, it will work. Diluting also makes your bottle of lemon juice last longer, or saves you from having to squeeze several pounds of lemons.
If you are experiencing an irritated scalp, try one of the Kristalovino fruit acids, or apple juice. Ancient Sunrise® Malluma Kristalovino is the gentlest of all of the Ancient Sunrise® fruit acid powders, and makes henna shades darker for rich auburn and brunette shades. Ancient Sunrise® Kristalovino is the second gentlest, and leaves results light and bright. Apple juice is mild, and will result in a tone that is neither too light nor dark, but can be sticky and make your mix smell boozy.
If you are looking for bright, coppery or fiery tones that stay bright over time, try Ancient Sunrise® Copperberry fruit acid powder, or pure cranberry juice. Both are high in antioxidants that prevent the henna color from darkening over time. If you opt for cranberry juice, make sure to get the real thing—many are a mixture of other juices, water, sugar, and some cranberry juice. 100% pure cranberry juice can be expensive, though.
Final Notes
Lemon juice is a great mixing liquid for some people; for others, it can cause issues. Be aware of this if you are new to mixing henna, or if you are mixing henna for someone else. If you are experiencing an itchy, irritated scalp, or if you notice that your hair color is getting too dark over time, consider using a different dye-release acid. You will very likely find that lemon juice is the culprit. Again, the same goes for lime, which is even more acidic and phototoxic than lemon. Lemon juice at full strength can be tolerated by some. Lime juice should always be diluted, and better yet, avoided.
If you have any questions about what acidic medium to use in your henna mix, feel free to comment below or contact Customer Service at www.Mehandi.com.
Author Rebecca Chou May 2018 Edited Maria Moore November 2022
In the henna for hair world, a “gloss” is usually a mixture of prepared henna and/or indigo paste diluted with conditioner, yogurt, aloe gel, coconut milk, or some other medium. The result is supposedly a more subtle color change along with “deep conditioning.” Glosses are extremely popular and attractive, especially to those who are new to henna. They seem to somehow be easier, less intimidating, and user-friendly. The idea of a subtle color change and killing two birds with one stone by mixing henna and conditioner seems wonderful…right?
I’m sorry to burst your bubble. There are better ways to achieve both a subtle color change and conditioning. Glosses are a waste of good henna and your money. Because the diluting medium inhibits dye uptake, color results are temporary, and most of the conditioning benefits of henna are unavailable. While they have their place in rare occasions, more often than not, there is a better alternative to the gloss. This article will explain some of the myths behind glosses, and offer better alternatives which will result in the same subtle color change, but with permanence and all of the benefits we love about henna.
A gloss is a mixture of plant dye paste and conditioner. The result of a gloss is not as saturated, nor as permanent.
Where Did the Gloss Come From?
For as long as henna has been used to color hair, the mixture has always involved henna and an acidic liquid. Oils, yogurt, milk, and other ingredients were sometimes included in these recipes, and the recipes were passed along. These uses became part of the mythology of “How people used henna back in the day.” Earlier in the history of The Henna Page and Ancient Sunrise®, we tinkered with and recommended methods for using glosses. These were always meant to be a quick, temporary fix, not the go-to method. Over time, the use of the gloss grew, spread through natural beauty blogs and videos, other henna companies, and word of mouth within families and communities. Some companies now even sell oil-based bars containing henna, promising color and conditioning.
If people have been adding all kinds of things to their mix for hundreds of years, it must be the correct way to do it, right? The desire to use natural beauty products sometimes comes with a desire to go back to a mythical time of purity: A time before commercialization brought about harmful chemicals, when humans were more intuitively connected with nature and all things healthy. Looking back on older methods and recipes seems to make sense. Sadly, this mythical time did not exist. People also once painted their faces with lead and brushed their teeth with urine.
Past methods come shrouded in nostalgia, packed with folk remedies and wives’ tales, and lacking good science. We have science now! By systematically studying how these ingredients work at the molecular level, we can now determine the most effective methods, and come to the conclusion that adding certain ingredients into henna mixes renders the mix much less effective. An effective henna mix only requires quality henna powder, an acidic liquid, and an understanding of temperature and time. Oils, fats, silicones, and glycerins block dye molecules from binding to the hair strand. Much of the valuable benefits to henna are doing right down your drain.
“But, I love dyeing my hair and getting a deep conditioning treatment at the same time.”
Henna is an amazing conditioner. In addition to adding strength and shine to your hair, it re-balances moisture, reinforces the keratin cuticle, and has anti-fungal properties. Make it into the gloss, and you won’t get all of those amazing benefits at their full strength.
There is an ongoing myth that henna is drying or damaging to the hair. This myth has contributed to the use of oils, conditioners, and other “moisturizing” ingredients in a henna mixture. The idea was that the addition of these ingredients would protect the hair from negative effects of henna. Some henna for hair products are made of poor quality henna, full of large plant particles and sand. Compound hennas contain metallic salts, PPD, and other additives that did nasty things to the hair. If you are using finely sifted, 100% pure BAQ henna, the idea of henna being drying or damaging is absolutely untrue.
Most earlier hennas available in the US were compound hennas, containing harmful additives. There are still compound hennas sold today, which claim to be pure. Always go with lab-tested henna!
Some people report their hair feeling dry and unmanageable after using henna. This is because, when the paste is processing on your head, the low pH causes the outer keratin scales of the hair to temporarily lift, allowing the dye to enter more effectively. During the following days, as the dye oxidizes and settles into place, the hair will go back to normal. Rinsing with cool water and/or vinegar can smooth the cuticle down more quickly.
There is nothing wrong with using a conditioning treatment after washing out your henna. Feel free to apply whatever you planned to mix into your henna, separately and after you have hennaed your hair. Many people find that it is not necessary, as henna is an effective enough conditioning treatment on its own.
“I’ve done it this way for ages, and it works for me.”
Many people begin with glosses when they start using henna, and find that they love the results. They continue to use the same method for several years. While they do get some color and conditioning benefit, without learning new and better methods, they never know how much better it could be! It’s like having a California roll for the first time and deciding that you love sushi, but never eating anything other than California rolls following that. (Okay, a bit of a stretched analogy, but I will personally fight you on the ways of proper sushi.)
Try one of the methods I’ll describe later in this article. Henna, indigo, cassia, and fruit acid powders make natural hair coloring amazingly versatile, and you’ll find you can achieve nearly any natural hair color with the right mixture. You will find that skipping the conditioner gives you a much richer color that doesn’t fade, and longer-lasting strength and shine.
“I don’t want a huge color change.”
You don’t have to have one. At Ancient Sunrise®, we’ve mastered the art and science of formulating mixtures to suit every need. We work one-on-one with our customers to help them achieve their desired color. Very often, our customers simply want to cover their gray hair to match their natural color. If you want just a hint of red, or to darken your color one or two shades, that’s no problem at all. It can be done with the right mix of henna, indigo, and/or cassia.
“I like glosses because they’re easier to apply and rinse out.”
It is true that many henna for hair products contain henna that is poorly sifted and full of large particles that get tangled in the hair. If you have not yet tried Ancient Sunrise® products, you may be surprised by the difference. Ancient Sunrise® plant dye powders are finely sifted. Ancient Sunrise® Rajasthani Jasmine henna, Ancient Sunrise® Zekhara indigo, and Ancient Sunrise® Zekhara cassia are the finest out of all of them, and great for those who have thick, curly, or textured hair, as well as those with delicate damaged hair.
Indigo powder can be a little gritty, and this can be solved with a little CMC powder, which makes the paste much silkier without inhibiting the dye.
If you are already using Ancient Sunrise® products and are still frustrated with application and washing, contact Customer Service. They have a number of tips and tricks that make the process much easier. For example, some prefer their paste thicker or thinner. Some work from the top of their head down, or vice versa. Some like to enlist a friend or significant other to help. When washing henna out, a “mermaid rinse” works very well. Soak and swish your hair in warm water to loosen out the majority of the paste, then shampoo and condition as normal. Sometimes massaging a handful of conditioner through your hair after the mermaid rinse helps the extra particles slip out. Again, there’s nothing wrong with using conditioners after henna; just don’t mix them in.
“What about indigo glosses?”
Indigo glosses are a mixture of a small amount of indigo paste and a diluting medium, usually conditioner. These are used to subtly darken or tone down hair that is too bright or light after a henna/indigo treatment, or if the indigo has faded from the hair over time. We recommend them occasionally, but they are best used as a temporary fix rather than a true method. The result is not permanent.
If you used indigo in your mix but it did not bind effectively, leaving brassy roots, mix up a small amount of regular, full-strength indigo paste, dab it into the areas that need to be fixed, and rinse it out after a few minutes. If you have just dyed your hair and it looks too bright, wait a few days for the color to oxidize before trying to adjust it. It may settle out on its own.
Indigo glosses can be avoided as you perfect your mix and technique. This may involve increasing the amount of indigo you use in your next mix, and thoroughly cleansing your hair prior to application.
Apply indigo paste, or a henna/indigo mixture to roots that came out too light.
Alternatives to Glosses
The first and most obvious alternative to the gloss is to simply omit the conditioner, and apply the henna mixture as is. The color results will be more vivid and permanent. Your hair will get the full power of the strengthening and conditioning properties of henna. If you have naturally darker hair, you do not need to worry about your result being too bright or red, as henna is translucent and cannot lighten the hair.
If you have a naturally lighter hair color and worry that henna will make your hair too red, mix it with cassia. A mixture of 1 part henna and 4 parts cassia will give light hair a warm, strawberry blonde glow. Both the henna and cassia will make your hair shiny and strong. You may also choose to play around with acids, or add a small amount of indigo if you don’t want the result to be too bright. This article goes into further detail.
You could try using cassia paste in place of conditioner. Mix cassia powder with distilled water, and combine it with your henna or henna/indigo paste. Cassia that has not been dye-released will impart very little color. It can dilute the strength of your other plant dyes without inhibiting uptake the way conditioner might.
Mohair dyed with cassia and henna in different proportions. The sample to the left is the original color.
If you are new to henna and are attracted to glosses because you are worried about having a permanent result you don’t like, instead of relying on the temporary nature of a gloss, strand-test a few different mixtures on hair that you’ve collected from your hairbrush or a trim, and use those to settle on a color, rather than using your head as a guinea pig.
Test some hair collected from your hair brush with a small amount of paste to determine the color result.
If you are using glosses because you want your color change to be temporary, then sure, a gloss may be the way to go. Henna is permanent when used properly, and can only be removed from the hair using lightening treatments. You may want to try mixing up some zizyphus paste to use in place of conditioner in your gloss. Ancient Sunrise® Zizyphus spina christi powder is a natural cleanser and conditioner. Its natural plant waxes may prevent the henna from binding as successfully.
Conclusion
Glosses are overused. They gained popularity through the spread of some less-than-accurate information. More often than not, a full-strength mix of henna, indigo, and/or cassia will give you the same, or better results. It may require some recipe or technique adjustments, but we believe that you will be much happier with the color and condition of your hair after ditching glosses. You will not need to re-apply as frequently, saving money and time. If you need assistance, contact Ancient Sunrise® Customer Service via phone, email, or online chat.
People have been using plants and other materials to change the color of their hair long before commercial hair dyes were invented. The resurgence in natural and DIY beauty has led to a long and strange list of ingredients being mixed up and put on the hair. Many of these are food items. Others are borrowed from natural fabric dyeing. However, just because something is natural and has a color does not mean that it will 1) bind permanently to the hair strand, and/or 2) be safe to use on the hair.
Many plants which will dye fabric require simmering and/or being set with a mordant. Because one should not do either with the hair, it will not work the same way. Most foods are, well, best used as foods. Eat them, and you get nutrients and a happy tummy. Put them on your head, and you get a lot of food rinsed down the drain for very little effect.
There are very, very few dyes that are capable of binding to the hair in a permanent manner. Out of these, there are fewer which are safe (Hint: if it is effective and safe, we probably sell it at Mehandi.com). At a molecular level, a dye needs a small enough molecule or a chemical reaction to break past the keratin layers on the surface of the hair strand, and then oxidize into a larger molecule that cannot easily escape back out of the hair, binding it there permanently. This is what oxidative (store-bought) dyes do.
Dyes like henna and cassia bind to the hair via a Michael addition, facilitated by the low pH environment of the paste. Despite having beautiful, vivid colors, most plants cannot dye the hair because the molecule is too large. Without simmering for long periods of time or the use of a mordant to chemically bind the dye, the color simply sits atop the hair and will wash right out.
Below is a list, in alphabetical order, of the many things people attempt to use, either mixed into a henna treatment or on its own. Each item will be examined for the following questions: 1) Does it affect hair color? 2) Is the color change permanent? 3) Is it safe? Additionally, most will include explanations for how the ingredient came to exist in hair recipes if it is not safe or effective.
Amla
Amla does not contain a dye. When used to dye-release henna, it affects the resulting color of the henna by muting brighter tones. It assists a successful indigo bind by temporarily loosening the hydrogen bonds in the hair, allowing more dye to enter. Real amla is safe. If an amla product claims to change the color of the hair, it may contain other ingredients, and may not be safe.
Beets
Beets will stain your hands, change the color of your urine, and can dye fabric when simmered and used with a mordant. Because you do not want to simmer and use mordants on your hair, you cannot achieve a permanent stain using beets. It is safe but will do nothing for your hair.
Black Tea
Many natural hair blogs claim that strong black tea will darken your hair. If it does, the result will be very subtle, and very temporary. Some people use black tea as their acidic liquid for henna, but it is generally not quite acidic enough for a good dye release. A strong brew of black tea may cause caffeine jitters when absorbed through the scalp. Relatively safe; not effective for hair coloring.
Blueberry
On its own, blueberries or blueberry juice will not create a noticeable change in your hair color. Added to henna as a dye-releasing liquid, the anthocyanins in blueberry juice will add a subtle ash tone to the color to cool it. This effect may fade over time. It is safe, but subtle and not permanent. Ancient Sunrise® Nightfall Rose fruit acid powder is made from powdered purple aronia fruit, which is like a hardcore version of the blueberry.
Buxus (Katam)
Buxus is mixed with henna in the same way that indigo is, to create soft brunette tones. It is safe. Here’s the problem: Buxus was produced in Yemen, which is under civil conflict. There are few if any producers of buxus left, and Yemen is not exporting goods to the US at this time. If you find anyone claiming to sell buxus, it is most likely a mixture of henna and indigo or some other type of counterfeit.
Calendula
Calendula is a bright yellow flower. It is used as a natural fabric and food dye. It is sometimes used to give a golden tone to cheese and butter. Calendula will show up in an internet search for natural ways to dye your hair. Like so many other items on this list, calendula’s dye will not break into and bind to the keratin cuticle of your hair without the use of heat and mordants.
Carrot
Carrot juice is delicious. Carrots are a good way to make friends with rabbits or horses. Despite their bright orange color, soaking your hair in carrot juice will not do much. Safe, but better eaten. Any color result that may occur will wash out.
Cassia
Hooray! The first effective contestant on the list. Cassia Auriculata will dye light hair a golden wheat color. It provides similar benefits as henna. Not quite as strong or permanent as henna, cassia may need to be applied more often, or mixed with a small amount of henna for a more effective bind. Cassia is great for diluting henna or henna/indigo mixes to great vibrant fiery reds, or lighter browns. On dark hair, cassia will not cause a color change but is great for conditioning. Cassia is very safe.
Chamomile
Chamomile shows up in natural beauty sites very often because it is supposed to naturally lighten hair. The instructions usually involve soaking hair in chamomile tea or spritzing the hair with tea in a spray bottle. Like lemon, some use it in their hair prior to going out into the sun. Chamomile seems to deliver very subtle, very slow results that appear if one’s hair is already blonde or light brown. If your hair is dark, no luck. If your hair is dyed with henna, chamomile will not remove the henna. With hair that is already light brown or blonde, it would take weeks of daily hair-soaking and dozens of tea bags to achieve a noticeable difference if any at all. Chamomile is not a strong enough acid to use for dye-releasing henna. It is safe, but drinking chamomile tea may make you sleepy.
Cherry
Many people long to have hair the same color as black cherries. That deep, purple-red is gorgeous, and sadly, only achievable with chemical dyes. Cherry juice might be a good contestant for dye-release liquid, but because of its antioxidant and anthocyanin content, not because of its color. Cherries are safe, as long as you are not allergic, and remember to spit out the pits.
Cinnamon
Cinnamon is another common ingredient in natural beauty recipes for lightening hair. It smells wonderful, but cinnamon is irritating to the skin. I once tried the cinnamon-and-honey hair mask out of curiosity, and it felt like I rubbed tiger balm all over my scalp. Like lemon, honey, and chamomile, if there is any effect at all, it would show up on hair that is already light, require several treatments, and be very subtle. Not entirely safe, and not very effective. Will do nothing to the color result of a henna mix. If you want to make your henna mix smell nice, try ginger or cardamom powder instead.
Coffee
This is one of the most common items people ask about. Some henna sites still recommend mixing henna with strongly brewed black coffee. Coffee seems to temporarily darken the hair, but caffeine is transdermal and will cause jitters and headaches if you leave it on your scalp for several hours. You will also have to put up with the smell. Imagine breathing through a used coffee filter for three hours. A coffee “rinse” would do nothing. Do not put coffee in your mix. If you want to darken your henna, add a little indigo.
Dandelion
Bright yellow flower. Fun for making wishes. Used in salads. See Calendula above.
Henna
Pure, BAQ henna is safe, effective, and permanent. But if you are reading this blog, you might know that by now. Feel free to read the other articles to learn all about how to use it. Henna allergies are extremely rare. Henna’s dye molecule binds to keratin and will not fade. Because henna is not well regulated, all henna is not equal. Make sure you know the difference between true henna and compound henna, which is unsafe and contains a number of additives.
Honey
Honey produces small amounts of peroxide, which can bring out some highlights to hair that is already light. The effect is minimal. It will not do anything to dark hair. Do not add it to a henna mix; it will inhibit dye uptake. It is safe unless you are an infant, or allergic to honey. Honey is great with some peanut butter on toast. It is also nice in tea. In your hair, it is a sticky mess that won’t do much.
Indigo
Used in conjunction with henna, indigo creates permanent shades of brunette. On its own, it may dye lighter hair a gray-blue color, which may fade. Henna helps indigo bind permanently. It is safe. Some with mold allergies notice a reaction to indigo. Patch test beforehand if concerned, and avoid inhaling powder particles. Read more about indigo here.
Jagua
Jagua is derived from the fruit, Genipa americana which grows in South America. Its juice has been used in body art to create deep blue stains on the skin. Jagua is extremely expensive. The amount of jagua juice needed to mix with 100g of henna powder would be over a hundred dollars. Not worth it. Jagua is also known to cause allergies in those who are allergic to certain fruits. Some distributors may sell products containing PPD claiming it is pure jagua. Verdict: Not for hair, expensive, and proceed with caution.
Kool-Aid
Dyeing hair with powdered drink mixes is popular among young people because it is cheap, temporary, and can result in unnatural colors. The high concentration of food dyes can cause a temporary stain on lighter hair. It is relatively safe, but not permanent, and not necessarily “natural.” It will probably stain your clothes and pillowcase as it fades off. Adding it to henna would probably not do anything, as the lawsone would greatly overpower any food dye.
Lemon
Lemon juice has been used to add highlights to blond hair. It works similarly to peroxide. You will not see much change in darker hair. It will not lighten hair that has been dyed with henna. When used as an acid in a henna mix, the low pH will actually cause the resulting stain to oxidize greatly over time, causing a darker color. Those who are sensitive to citrus may notice an itchy, bumpy, or red scalp when using henna mixed with lemon juice. It can also cause UV sensitivity. When used with henna, it is smart to dilute lemon juice with 3-4 parts distilled water.
Hibiscus
This is another plant that is popular in natural beauty blogs. Hibiscus is a beautiful red flower with a sweet, tart flavor. The flowers are dried and sold whole and in powder form. According to those who recommend using it, hibiscus supposedly brings red hues to the hair. If effective, the result would be very temporary. Hibiscus is high in anthocyanins, so if there is any effect of it being mixed with henna, it would act more like Ancient Sunrise® Nightfall Rose fruit acid powder, or blueberry juice, cooling the henna color rather than adding red tones. Hibiscus makes for a delicious cold summer drink. Save it for that, instead.
Iron (rust)
Some cultures have mixed henna in iron containers, and this recommendation has come through to blogs and natural sites today. Some sites recommend adding a few rusty nails (or any rusty iron item) into the henna if you do not have an iron pot. A low-pH liquid would react with the iron to create iron oxide, which may impart a dark color to the hair temporarily. You do not want minerals in your hair. Not only does mineral buildup inhibit dye uptake, but can cause the hair to become stiff and dry. This is why we recommend clarifying the hair before applying henna and using distilled water.
Note: This is not to say that henna and metal should never mix. Henna can be mixed in stainless steel bowls, or with any run-of-the-mill spoon just fine.
Nettle
Nettle has been recommended on some natural beauty sites claiming it will darken hair and stimulate growth. It can dye fabrics but requires simmering and mordants to do so. There will be little to no effect on hair. There are no studies that show significant effects on hair growth. While nettle can be eaten, or used for tea, harvesting nettle from the great outdoors can result in some nasty stings.
Onion
This is another one pulled from fabric dyeing. Onion skins can dye fabrics a lovely yellow color. It will not work on hair. Some claim that rinsing hair in water that has been boiled with onion or onion skin will promote hair growth. This claim has not been proven. Do yourself and others a favor, and do not put onions in your henna, or in your hair at all. You will end up smelling like onions for no reason.
Pomegranate
Pomegranates have an absolutely beautiful color, and anyone who has opened one will know that the juice can stain your skin, clothes, and cutting board. It will not stay in your hair. There’s nothing wrong with using it as your dye-release liquid, other than expense. It is high in anthocyanins, so it would most likely work similarly to blueberry juice.
Raspberry
See: Blueberry, Cherry, and Pomegranate. Safe, and decent for a dye-release liquid; will not dye hair.
Red Cabbage
You may have done the experiment in science class where you use cabbage juice as a pH indicator. If not, it’s pretty cool. The purple liquid turns shades of pink when mixed with an acid, and blue to green when mixed with a base. Fabric dyers can use this to their advantage to create a variety of shades. I feel like a broken record by now but guess what. Works with simmering and a mordant; won’t work on hair.
Rhubarb
Rhubarb supposedly adds a golden tone to light hair. It is recommended on natural beauty sites and is sometimes included in “herbal” or “natural” hair dye mixes. Despite its pretty, red stalks, rhubarb will not add red tones to the hair. It contains chrysophanic acid, the same molecule responsible for cassia’s golden results. However, rhubarb root creates a very vivid, unnatural yellow that isn’t generally desired as a hair color. In addition, the dye does not bind well and fades over time. Better saved for fabric dyeing and pies.
Rosemary
Rosemary oil has long been recommended and used for hair growth and darkening hair. After scouring research databases, I found one clinical study which showed the effectiveness of rosemary oil against androgenetic alopecia, and none on hair darkening. Because only the abstract was available I could not make a determination on the soundness of the study. The claimed hair-growth effect is due to rosemary’s rubefacient quality. Rubefacients are by their nature, irritants. They stimulate circulation (redness) in the skin by dilating blood vessels. Do not put essential oils in henna. They dull the resulting color and can cause headaches.
Saffron
Holy expense. Not only will it fail to alter your hair color, but a gram of real saffron can cost up to $25. It is the most expensive spice in the world, and counterfeit/adulterated saffron is common. Saffron rice is delicious. If you get your hands on some real saffron, make rice. Safe, expensive, and pointless for hair.
Sage
Similar claims as Rosemary. Just like Rosemary, there is no definitive proof of sage’s ability to dye hair. Pretty safe. Good for clearing your home of ghouls and ghosties, or bad smells. Not effective for coloring hair.
Para-phenylenediamine (PPD)
NOT SAFE. Para-phenylenediamine is the active ingredient in most commercial hair dyes and is highly sensitizing. Yes, it effectively colors hair. It is also known to cause serious allergic reactions. Sensitivity to PPD is increasing due to the popularity of “black henna” tattoos, which use a concentrated form of dye. As a coal tar derivative, it is not natural. Read more about it here, here, here, and here.
Most commercial hair dyes contain PPD. Even products labeled “natural” or claiming to be henna can have PPD.
Tomato
If you’ve ever spilled pasta sauce or ketchup on your clothes, you were probably quite happy to find that the stain did not stay permanently. Soaking your hair in tomato juice is not an effective way to dye your hair, and like many other items on this list, any color result obtained will wash out. Tomatoes are acidic, so I can’t think of anything wrong with using tomato juice as a dye-release liquid, other than the fact that it would smell very strange. Better idea: enjoy a Bloody Mary while the henna is in your hair.
Turmeric
Turmeric gives curry dishes their bright yellow color. It is used in fabric dyeing. When mixed with an alkaline solution, turmeric’s ochre yellow color turns vivid red. When turmeric paste is rubbed onto the skin, it will leave a yellow stain. Turmeric may temporarily stain light hair yellow but will wash out quickly. Be prepared to turn your tub and towels yellow. Safe; beautiful color; will not dye hair.
Turmeric was used to stain the skin yellow in this body art piece. It will fade away after a good scrub.
Walnut
Black walnut powder has been sold on its own and in pre-mixed henna powders. It leads to darker results. Black walnut will dye hair but has a high risk of allergic reaction. Indigo will work just as well, if not better. Somewhat effective, but not as safe.
Woad
Mehandi.com no longer carries indigo for body art due to it being hard to resource.
Woad is one of the most ancient dyes, used to dye fabrics “Celtic blue.” It is speculated that the Celts also used it on their skin, as seen in the movie Braveheart. The process is extremely smelly, like rotten cabbages. The dye molecule, indigo, in woad is the same as it is in the indigo (indigofera tinctoria) plant. Just use indigo plant powder. It is easier to get your hands on and doesn’t have the stink. If you want to paint yourself blue.
Ancient Blue® is an indigo product that mimics the use of woad on the skin, without the cabbage stink.
Final Notes
All in all, it is best to keep a henna mix to its bare essentials and to keep food for eating purposes. Many foods do have nutrients that are beneficial for hair and skin, but in order to take advantage of them, you need to process them through your digestive system. Additionally, if you don’t already have these items laying around, going out and finding them only complicates and adds expense to your henna method, for no real pay-off.
Please don’t hesitate to contact Ancient Sunrise® Customer Service if you have any additional questions. If there is an item you’d like to see added to this list, please comment below.
Author: Rebecca Chou 2/23/18 Edited: Maria Moore 11/16/22