

🌈 Elevate your hair game with nature’s vibrant touch!
Rainbow Research Henna Hair Color and Conditioner in Persian Mahogany Medium Auburn is a 4 oz powder that delivers a 100% botanical, chemical-free demi-permanent hair color. It nourishes and conditions hair while providing rich, natural auburn tones that last 4-6 weeks, ideal for covering grays and enhancing hair health without harsh additives.
| ASIN | B0084223RO |
| Best Sellers Rank | #37,063 in Beauty & Personal Care ( See Top 100 in Beauty & Personal Care ) #38 in Hair Hennas |
| Brand | Rainbow Research |
| Brand Name | Rainbow Research |
| Color | Mahogany Medium Auburn |
| Container Type | Bottle |
| Customer Reviews | 4.0 out of 5 stars 1,424 Reviews |
| Full Cure Time | 6 Weeks |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00000518400071 |
| Hair Color Permanence | Demi-Permanent |
| Hair Type | Normal |
| Item Form | Powder |
| Item Weight | 5.3 Ounces |
| Manufacturer | Rainbow Research |
| Material Features | Natural |
| Number of Items | 1 |
| Package Information | Bottle |
| Product Benefits | Nourishing, Conditioning, Long-Lasting Color |
| UPC | 000518400071 |
| Unit Count | 4.0 Ounce |
B**T
Henna diary
I wanted to cover my grays. I've had fun trying colored hairsprays, but they are expensive, polluting, and some irritate my scalp. I did a lot of research before trying this brand, Rainbow Henna, in light brown. I didn't want to dye my hair red or orange. I wanted my hair to still match the mixed ash and blonde fun bun I sometimes wear, which was a difficult match to find for my real hair color. I ordered this Rainbow Henna in light brown. While waiting for it to arrive I continued my research, and came across cassia. Cassia is known as neutral henna, but is unrelated to the henna plant. From what I learned about it, I was about to give or throw away this Rainbow Henna and start over, but I stopped to read the ingredients on the label: Light brown Henna (Lawsonia Inermis), Indigofera, Cassia Obovata! Weds. 15Jan20 Also while waiting, I stumbled onto a YouTube video in which a lady showed how to mix henna with shampoo. Great, I thought, because if I can't shampoo it in, and rinse it out in a normal shower, I probably won't ever do it again. So I did it. I boiled water. While it was cooling, I spooned some of the Rainbow Henna powder into a stoneware soup bowl, using a stainless spoon. I gradually added the hot water to the henna powder, and stirred and stirred. The trouble is, you get the mixture smooth but it goes lumpy again. Working quickly, I added quite a bit of shampoo. You want to make sure you're using a gentle, clean shampoo, free of parabens, phthalates and nasty stuff. I found out you want to use one that normally leaves your hair feeling clean and limp, not a body volumizing shampoo, because you don't want coating ingredients to interfere with the henna. I used Whole Foods 365 Lavender shampoo. I poured in some apple cider vinegar and some castor oil I already had on hand. I have no measurements to convey. It was all about getting a shampoo-in texture. I leaned my head over the kitchen sink and wet my hair. I didn't even take off my t-shirt or have a towel handy. I wanted to just get my hair wet, not drenched, but I did end up using a kitchen towel to blot my hair and keep from dripping. I then did a final stir-up of my ingredients, getting a consistency I could work with, and used my hand to put globs of mixture all over my wet hair. I didn't stroke it down the strands. I was shampooing. I worked it into the front where I have the most gray, and more gently all over the sides and back, just like shampooing in the shower, though I think I was being a bit rougher. I forgot I didn't have a plastic shower cap or any plastic cling wrap, so I slit open the side of a gallon freezer bag and put it on, folding up the sides like a dutch girl hat. I put the leftover mixture in a lidded tupper. I worked at my computer for an hour while the mixture sat on my head under the plastic baggie, then threw away the baggie and eagerly jumped into the shower. Wow! Can it really be that easy? I inspected my henna job more closely the next morning. The grays were golden blonde. Hair texture was shiny and healthy. The color of my non-grayed hair was a bit darker than my normal, but varied from a lightest to a darkest just like natural hair color does. Fri. 17Jan20 Regular shower and shampoo, no henna. No loss of color! Grays all still looking blonde. So far so good. Sun. 19Jan20 Regular shower and shampoo, no henna treatment. No loss of color. Gray roots starting to grow out just a sliver of a fraction of an inch. Tues 21Jan20 I opened my tupper of leftover mixture from the first treatment. It might have been enough. I should have tried it for that reason, but I mixed up more. I used up the leftover and a few globs of the new. Thurs 23Jan20 Regular shower and shampoo, no henna. I went out with a friend in the early evening when there was still plenty of sun. She told me the henna looked great, and that my hair had a reddish cast, otherwise looking pretty close to my real color. Saturday 25Jan20 I tried to use some of the leftover mixture to henna the fun bun I sometimes use. I had to throw away my ruined bun. I forgot about the castor oil in the mixture. What do you do but look at colors online until you see a slightly darker than dark blonde bun with some reddish highlights? I ordered a new bun. First try and it's a perfect match to my henna'd hair. Wednesday February 5 After waiting two whole weeks and one day, to really see how long each henna treatment would last, I did another one, only because my grey roots were showing. I'm sticking with this brand. My hair looks and feels great, and my new fun bun matches it. Final tips: Order a package of 25, 50 or 100 super cheap clear shower caps for when you're sitting that hour with henna on your head. On henna day, wear a black t-shirt or your black robe, in case any blobs escape the shower cap. Blue dish detergent and a tub brush make short work of cleaning the tub after you shower out your henna mixture. All this trouble is only necessary, for me anyway, every two weeks.
A**R
Great hair color!
I used light brown henna and as you can see it is actually red, but I like it. It does not do too good on my gray roots, as you can see it turns my gray roots a funky yellow color. I use magic root touch up only on my roots and that does the trick, I use dark blonde magic root touch up by loreal. I have been using this henna for 6 months now, and I absolutely recommend it. It has made such a difference to my hair. My hair is so soft and healthy I almost can't believe it. This henna powder is an awesome hair conditioner! I use one jar, I start by mixing about 1/3 of the powder with one egg, to help the mixture stick to my hair and also it is good for hair, with 2 tablespoons apple cider vinegar, to help cover gray, and enough strong coffee to form a mixture to a yogurt like condition. Then I use hair clips and section my hair off and apply this to my roots. I cover my head with a plastic cap and wait an hour. Then I mix the rest of the powder with an egg, 2 tablespoons of vinegar and just enough coffee to make it the texture of yogurt and apply it to the rest of my hair, cover my head and wait 2 hours. It actually feels like you have mud in your hair. I recommend rinsing it out in the kitchen sink because it goes everywhere in the shower and makes a mess. If you are tired of damaging your hair with chemicals, and you don't mind red hair you should definitely try this!
L**N
EXCELLENT PRODUCT!!
I am very pleased with this product. I haven't used any henna hair color of any type since the 80's...back when I used to color my hair just for fun. Ha! I'm now fifty-one, and I have about 30% gray hair to color. My hair is light brown, naturally. I used to use a product called Hennalucent that was really wonderful, but it has been discontinued. I had to STOP using other kinds of hair color, i.e. salon color, box hair color because they were making my scalp itch and break out. Not good. Not to mention I feel like those hair colors were damaging my hair over time. So I did some research before ordering this product, both on the Amazon website and on the Rainbow Research website and a few other places just to see as many product reviews as possible. I mixed about half of the container of this light brown henna with boiling hot coffee, two tablespoons of apple cider vinegar, and two tablespoons of olive oil per manufacturer instructions. I used the coffee to help tone down the red...it is henna, after all. The vinegar is for helping the henna hold onto gray hair a little better. The olive oil is for conditioning. This mixture is hard to get stirred up and get the lumps out, I must admit. It is rather coarse...not as fine as henna I used in the past. I know a lot of reviewers also complain about the smell. Well it has a smell like grass or hay. And it is the vibrant green of grass clippings when you mix it up, which might be a little disconcerting for first-time users. In any case, I put this stuff all over my hair, which was about two and a half or three inches below shoulder length, at the time. I then put a shower cap on over it and left it on for an hour. It was no longer green, when I took my shower cap off to rinse, I'm happy to stay. More of a brown color. So I rinsed it and rinsed it and washed with some shampoo then a good, thick conditioner. You really need to shampoo and especially condition to get all of this stuff out of your hair. It's kind of dry and gritty when you're trying to rinse. The final result was excellent! A natural looking light brown..NOT red. And my grays were a bit lighter so they blended and looked like highlights. Tips for users - I read some other complaints about the product online - complaints about the smell - it goes away after a wash or two. A few said it turned their hair orange...or green. Well, when they say to start with clean, dry hair. ( I think you could also start with clean DAMP hair) that means you shouldn't have any other styling product in it that could react with the henna. I also didn't use ANY hair color of ANY kind for four months before I used this. .I'm not saying it's necessary, but I feel not having any salon or boxed color on my hair helped my result. The only thing I would have done differently is to leave it on a little longer, I think. I wash my hair a LOT. Probably too much, but I just don't feel clean if I don't, and I tend to wash hair color out of my hair a lot sooner than other people might. But this has held so far and it's been about three weeks. I think you could leave it on safely for an extra thirty minutes to an hour longer. I did have to rinse my tub and shower out afterwards. The stuff gets all over when rinsing it out. But my final word is that it is WORTH IT to me and they sent me two jars. Enough product to color my hair about three times! Good investment.
L**S
Doesn't work for gray hair
It doesn't cover gray hair. Easy to apply, I left the henna for 4 hours and it didn't color any of my gray hair.
G**D
Works great on my gray hair
I love this henna! I have used it on myself for over a year, and also hennaed my friend's hair. We both have 20-30% gray hair. I didn't want to use chemicals on my hair since I have a lot of sensitivities. It cleaned off easily from my skin, towels, porcelain and tile, unlike permanent dyes. The directions are written really well. I looked through a few reviews before my initial use to get tricks and tips. Since they were helpful to me I thought I'd write my experiences. I have dark ash brown hair, my gray hair is silver. I love using light brown to make my hair look like I have blonde highlights. It does cover my dark brown hair to make it a warmer golden color. It lasts for at least 6 weeks, but I don't feel I need to re-do it until more than 8 weeks. I don't know how it does it, but it fades around your hair line so I don't see or feel I have a line where I dyed my hair. Believe me, I have an eye for that detail and I inspect it regularly. It does tend to be more permanent around the ends of hair. That could be because dying it multiple times gives the ends more exposure. Since it's a light color I just do my entire head for touch ups. It's hard to say what you're exact color will be at the end since it depends on your hair color and the time you leave it on. I feel that starting with a lighter color first works best. You can also go darker. If you are artistic you may want to combine colors. In it's pre-mix state, it is just a powder. Use a weighing scale to repeat your results for color mixing. When using: - put it on wet hair. Otherwise it won't stick as well. It will start to crumble rather than coat your hair. You also won't have enough to fully cover your hair. - use coffee or black tea instead of water, to make it less brassy. - use apple vinegar to make it stick to your gray hair. - Mix the vinegar with a raw egg - AFTER mixing most of the HOT coffer or water with the henna and you have mixed it well, add the raw egg. Otherwise you cook the egg if you dump it in with the water (guess how I know) - Don't add all the water right away. Depending on humidity you may need more or less water. You want it to be smooth like thick pudding, but not so moist it is runny. Dip a gloved finger in it to see the consistency. No liquid should run or drip from it. - When applying, start on the most gray areas first. That way it will have the longest amount of time to sit on your hair. - I use a heating cap I bought on Amazon. I feel the cap makes it shinier and softer. It also seems to make the color stay on my hair longer. When rinsing: - kneel in your tub and put your head under the faucet first to get the excess off. Don't worry if you feel like the tub is not draining fast enough, your tub uses suction when the shower head is on to remove the excess water in the tub. - shampoo your hair several times. You may still feel there is residual on your hair (I'm picky). But it will come out in the next day's shampooing. - I clogged the shower once. Only once. It was already draining slow due to a hair clog. I just got out the plunger and plunged until the water flowed. I haven't had a problem since I make sure there is no hair clog prior to this process. I thought I would mention it in case someone was worried this might happen, or it happened in the middle of rinsing. The first time I used this henna, I took this and all the extra ingredients to my hair stylist so she could apply it, and use all her equipment (the caps, the heating). I let her charge me the same price. I was happy to just not be exposed to the chemicals. Some stylists feel more comfortable than others using henna. There were other stylists there letting her know the consistency was good. Not all henna is chemical free. This one is!
J**S
Definitely worth it!
This is the best way to color hair naturally. It does get messy lol but I enjoy mixing the henna powder with water to create a smooth paste. I leave it on for 3 hours wrapped in plastic wrap. The results are amazing. I personally love it. I do it every 2 weeks or weekly if I wash my hair a lot.
A**R
Natural and Stinky
I like that henna is natural and non damaging to hair and scalp. I used the black Rainbow henna. I have naturally dark brown hair with a few grays now and then. Even though my hair is dark, I like to make it more vibrant. This stuff is powder you mix with water or tea. It mixed but was still a little grainy. I left it on for 75 minutes. It stunk. It had like a humid swamp odor. When I washed it out and shampooed, I still smelled it. I ended up washing my hair like three times. That odor just lingered. It was gross and gave me a headache. My hair was slightly colored by the henna but not vibrant black like I wanted. It was still dark brown, maybe slightly darker than natural. Definitely not worth the effort. I am going back to the cream henna I typically use. It won’t harm your hair, but it does smell terrible imo.
A**E
Hair feels great, white hair covered, and no crazy red tones!
I was super hesitant to try henna for my hair because I lived in the Middle East for a while and I had these visions of old village grandmothers who had carrot orange heads from henna. That said, I am trying to be more natural with the products I use on my hair and I knew at some point I had to switch coloring my hair with chemicals to something more natural. I had dirty blond hair to start out with. It had been colored a light neutral brown about 2 months previous. I used about half of one bottle because I have thin hair along with black tea, 2 Tablespoons of vinegar, and 2 Tablespoons of olive oil. I also added 1 teaspoon of amla powder which I got at an Indian grocery store because I heard it counterbalances the red tones in henna. As I put it on my hair it already felt amazing...like a spa day or something. I didn't feel this was as hard or messy to apply as I was expecting (I have thin hair...it might be a different story on thick heads). I left it on covered in plastic wrap for about 1 hour. It does take a bit of effort to wash it out. My hair looks super healthy and my scattered white hairs that have been popping up are covered. The color change isn't dramatic but I like that. I could see still a small line from where my hair was previously colored. I just couldn't believe how much body my hair had after this treatment. I have a slight slight copper tint going but nothing that is red or pronounced. I did feel that the product didn't have a super strong "henna" smell (again, time in the middle east, it's very distinctive) so this light brown color might be heavy on the clear henna or indigo. That said I'm super happy to cover the white hairs with something adding health to my hair instead of destroying it!
Trustpilot
1 month ago
1 month ago