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Basic Mehndi Mix

A mixing guide for beginners, by a beginner.

HENNA BREW

Ingredients

  • 15 grams (about 2 tablespoons) quality henna (order online from Mehandi.com or Henna Tribe suppliers)
  • 1/2 to 1 teaspoon sugar, brown sugar, honey, or molasses
  • 2 drops tea tree or cajeput essential oil
  • 1 drop of any other essential oil that smells good (I like geranium)
  • Lemon juice

Dissolve your sugar into 1 tablespoon of lemon juice. Add the mix to your henna,  and add more lemon juice until you have a thick paste. Mix well. Let sit for 2  hours in a warm spot. Add essential oils. Mix well. Add more lemon juice if needed  to reach desired consistency (comparable to that of toothpaste). Let sit 4 to 8  hours in a warm spot, or overnight. When you have dye release*, load into one or  more cones (cone materials are cheap — learn to roll one here or here) or jaquard bottles and apply. Seal your design and refrigerate the leftovers.

*Dye release has occurred when:

  • A small dot of henna left on your palm for ten minutes leaves a bright orange  stain on removal
  • The top layer of your mixed henna turns a dark brownish green, while the insides  remain bright green
  • If you mix your henna in a thin plastic sandwich baggie and set it out on a paper  towel, you will know you have dye release when you lift the baggie and see a  faint orange stain on the paper towel

TRADITIONAL HENNA SEALANT

  • 3 tablespoons lemon juice
  • 6+ tablespoons sugar, brown sugar, honey, or molasses

Mix well. Apply using cotton balls, Q-tips or a paintbrush.

Method one: Apply over dry design and layer with squares of toilet paper  thoroughly wetted with sealant. Let dry. Wrap with an Ace bandage or old sock  and leave on overnight. Peel off, and gently remove any remaining stickies with  vegetable oil, or water if necessary.

Method two: Once dry, seal entire design. Let sealant dry. Dust with baby powder or talcum. Leave on 6 to 8 hours, or wrap lightly with an  Ace bandage or old sock and leave on overnight. Pick off the henna goobers in  the morning, and remove any remaining bits gently with vegetable oil, or water if  necessary.

MAXX’S WONDER SEALER

  • 3 tablespoons Elmer’s glue
  • 3 tablespoons lemon juice
  • Glitter, if desired

Mix well. Apply over dry design using two Q-tips held together, or paint on with a  paintbrush. Don’t coat too thickly. Dries clear and hard. Peel off in 6 to 8 hours,  or cover loosely with a sock or Ace bandage and leave on overnight. Peel off in  the morning. Avoid washing — chlorine makes the design fade faster.

Eyebrows, Poste-Paste

Wow! It turned out pretty good. The skin color is no better/worse than filling in my eyebrows with powdered makeup, and it matches my hair color better than the brown eyeshadow I usually use anyway, even during the orange stage. I can’t tell for the life of me if it actually stained the hairs red. We’ll just have to see how it matches up with the hair on top of my head after a couple days.

So there you have it! Henna works well on eyebrows, too!

Eyebrowpasteoff

Fingertips

The design on my wrist and finger are kind of awkward, but I love what I came up with for my fingertips.

Unfortunately, it totally smeared and bled overnight (even though I didn’t use saran wrap, and even though I blowdried it before and after sealing it with glue — the price of an over-sugared mix).

Fingerdesign

Oh, and I had a fun time with the sealer again. I’ve been using Elmer’s gel glue because it’s all I had lying around, and it doesn’t mix very well with water. This time, I added a bit of eucalyptis and geranium oil to make it smell pretty, and it changed the texture of the glue somewhat. It mixed right up with a few drops of water to make a thick but spreadable sealer with a more even consistency than the gel glue with water alone. The eo’s also made it cloudy for some reason, which was weird. But it worked. Too bad my batch of henna didn’t do so well.

Groucho Marx


I never forget a face, but in your case I’ll be glad to make an exception.
-Groucho Marx

Okay, I’m going into very unknown territory here. My eyebrows were so not-red as compared to my newly-henna’d hair that, well, I henna’s my eyebrows.

Groucho

This is with the paste on, obviously.

My logic went something like this:

  1. I’m bored.
  2. My grandma tatooed her eyebrows… what’s so different about using henna on ‘em?
  3. Facial skin is too thin and oily to stain very well. So, my eyebrow skin shouldn’t be orange for too long. I hope.
  4. I’m bored.

So I took out my last cone of slimy-ass mehndi henna that I used on my hand the night before. (I had already decided to throw the batch out because, while the staining power was fine, it was a nearly unworkable texture and bled like hell overnight.) I coned in each of my eyebrows and cleaned them up around the edges with Q-tips. Then I put my hair back with a band to keep it from sticking to my eyebrows and took a photo for you all to giggle at. I’m gonna pray for four hours that this wasn’t a really, really bad idea, then wash it out and take another picture for y’all.

Wish me luck!

Full head henna

As cool as my henna highlights were, I decided to go all-out anyway. I wanted to see how the henna conditioned it, and I was feeling the need to be a little extreme (angst from overwork). So, I mixed together my recipe of henna, chamomile, yogurt, and lavendar, slathered it through my hair, wrapped it with saran wrap, and covered all that with a makeshift turban made out of a half-sized sarong I got in Hawaii.

Turban

I then laid down on the couch, wrapped a heating pad loosely around it all, and dozed off, because I was operating on three hours of sleep.

My mix was way too watery, though. Despite all my wrapping, when I got up after two hours to use the facilities, it started leaking out from behind my ears. It only sort of got on everything. And good thing I was wearing a black shirt!

Anyway, I averted disaster, slept for two more hours, then got up and rinsed it all out with conditioner — Herbal Essences Intensive Blends, or whatever is in my shower at the moment. I would highly recommend combing it through real well with a shower comb. I’ve been using a shower comb for a few years now anyway, but it would’ve been nearly impossible to get the tangle of henna out and get the conditioner in without one.

I then blowdried it so that any remaining henna wouldn’t stain my pillow, and threw on my bright green Happy Day shirt because I found Joan’s Henna Tribe comment about reverse oompa loompas really funny. :) So, behold! Elaine with freshly glowing orange henna head!

Oompaloompa

It stayed that color for about a day. It really is orange — I’ve been comparing it to a t-shirt I have that’s brown with big orange letters on it. During Day 1, my hair matched the letters. After one wash, though, it’s starting to calm down to a more auburn shade. Here’s a photo from, let’s see, about 20 hours after washing the henna out:

Hairday1

Very, very cool. I’m liking it a lot! It’s an even prettier red today, but I’m skipping photos today because I’ve been working like an ox, and I’ve got bedhead.

The only thing that bugs me is what an amazingly different shade my eyebrows are. I have a solution to that though, so stay posted!

Blessed

Okay, I have to give my man serious props, here. Impatient for henna glory, I decided to henna the rest of my hair tonight, even though that means the four-hour mark for washing the stuff out will be at around 2 a.m. There are a lot of comments one can make about smearing a bunch of smelly green goo over your hair and pulling it up into a makeshift turban for four hours. There are even more comments one can make when, after two hours, your turban starts leaking all over you and your couch. It takes quite a man to curb all comments to a single observation of "Huh, that smells funny" and wordlessly grab you a towel while you run to get napkins to wipe up the green slime running down your neck.

Thanks, hon. You’re the best!

Henna for Hair Demystified (sort of)

Experiment

Well, there you have it! This is the best I could do taking a photo of the back of my head with a digital camera at two in the morning. It’s all pretty light at this point because it’s fresh off my head, with no time to let the color mature. If you can’t see a difference (it’s pretty subtle), let me expound.

  1. The coffee had a browning and slightly darkening effect. It took a lot of the red out of it compared to the other mixes.
  2. The yogurt mix had a pretty straightforward color. Not too dark, not too brown, not too red. A little orangey. I have a feeling that this would be about the color of a standard henna and lemon juice mix, or a henna and water mix.
  3. The tea tree mix was brownish, too, but unlike the coffee, it maintained more of an auburn hue, not the "mousey" brown color my coworker described the coffee’d segment as.
  4. The chamomile is my favorite. It’s a dark, vibrant red that has a bit of a golden sheen.

This next photo is a good comparison of the henna color compared to my natural color. I only henna’d the underlayer of my hair (for the sake of this experiment!), but when I was twisting the upper layer out of the way in order to take the photo above, I got some of the henna’d hair in the twist, which made for a great contrast. You can really tell how the henna is an almost transluscent coloring over your natural color.

Streaks

And here’s a pretty cool photo of the overall effect! I forgot that my hair has tons of layers in the back, so my "under" layer isn’t really under anything. So I have this feathery flame effect going on.

Flamin

I think it’s pretty cool!

And I’m all prepared to do my whole head tomorrow, using my favorite ingredient: chamomile.

My recipe:

  • 80g henna
  • 1 cup double-strength chamomile
  • a dollop of full-fat yogurt (for texture and consistency)
  • a few drops of lavendar essential oil for the smell, to be added immediately before application

I hope I mixed a big enough batch…

There is a difference!

Okay, still no photos, but early reports are in! A coworker was noticeably impressed with the chamomile mix as opposed to the coffee mix. He described the chamomile as "vibrant" and the coffee mix as "mousey and dark." I’m postulating that the chamomile worked great on my hair because it has a naturally golden-reddish sheen to it anyway, so the red in the henna complimented the yellow in the chamomile for a most excellent result.

Someone in the Henna Page forums mentioned that terps like tea tree oil also have a browning effect for her, and from these early results, I’m thinking they have a similar effect on my hair, as the reddest bit is obviously the chamomiled segment. I’m anticipating my final mix to be mostly chamomile with a touch of yogurt for smoothness and some lavendar essential oil for smell.

I’m really glad I did the test. I was going to use indigo and coffee to take the edge off of the orangey-red, but my red didn’t turn out orangey at all.

Look out, world! Come Monday, Elaine’s gonna be a redhead again!

Teaser

Well, it’s too dark out to get any good photos (you can expect those in a day or two), but so far, the color is gorgeous, and there’s not much difference between the four. At first I thought that the chamomile side was more auburn, but it might have just been the lighting in the bathroom.

The color looks totally funky with the layers in my hair, too!

And now I smell like a weird, lemony-chocolate cup of coffee. With that, I’m off to some hard-earned Z’s. Oyasumi.

Let the games begin!

Here we go! We’ll start with the before pictures.

Hairbefore3_1

Hairbefore2_1

Hairbefore

I divided the underside of my hair and slathered my mixes into each segment. Unfortunately, I’m horrible at dividing my hair into segments, so by the time I got to my fifth mix… I didn’t have any hair left!!! The last mix was the plain lemon mix, and I’m assuming that it’s going to be similar to the yogurt mix in color, so the yogurt mix will have to be my control.

Anyway, I wrapped each segment in tinfoil and wrapped my head up like so:

Hairwrapped2

And now I’m going to go to work like this. Because I have to work late tonight, and it damn well wasn’t going to interfere with my henna experiment!!