This “Kid Color” Technique Got Me My Natural Hair Color Back


Julie Dickson has always been fascinated by “little kid hair”—the unbleached, never-touched-a-hot-tool tendrils that reflect the light with a kaleidoscope of colors. “I used to love it when I would get stuck behind a redheaded kid in line at the grocery store,” she tells me as she paints my own strands at her chic Lower East Side salon, Joon Drop. In each youthful mane lies a patchwork of subtle yet vibrant hues, which, for a master stylist like Dickson, is a feast for the eyes. “You’ll even see a purple strand, or a clear, strawberry strand,” she gushes.

These memories eventually became the impetus for her salon speciality: “kid color,” a low-maintenance dye job that takes you back to your most natural, youthful shade. As a member of the “blonde as a child” club, I was curious whether this subtle technique could truly catapult my strands back in time, so I skipped over to Joon Drop to put “kid color” to the test. Ahead, my investigation.

What Is the “Kid Color” Technique?