Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Deciding to ‘embrace the gray’ or not

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In a recent column, I read your advice on how to color your roots while we’re stuck at home. I have done this before, it generally looks ... OK. But now my roots, which are vastly more than just “roots,” are taking over. I shudder to think what they will look like by the time we can return to salons. I’m beginning to wonder if it’s time to “embrace the gray?” Any thoughts? who took issue with my instructio­ns on how to color roots at home. I wrote that it was messy and the dye stains everything it touches. All true. But many (very many) of you said I made it sound too difficult and they’ve been doing it for years with great results. I should emphasize it’s not that hard — and worth trying. Thanks to the majority of home dyers who were more diplomatic than Michelle B., who wrote, “Plastic bags, Vaseline, stained skin? Oh come on! Maybe you were expecting a seizure while dying your hair.” touch-ups around my hairline, especially by my temples, I use a stick I purchased from Sally Beauty (sallybeaut­y.com), ’Tween Time made by Roux. It resembles a really fat lipstick, comes in colors and you just wet it and apply to the gray — works great! Bargain at $7.99 as it lasts forever!”

“I developed the courage and confidence to try coloring at home by first using the eSalon service.

It’s a great way to start if you’ve never dyed your hair before; you send them pictures and they develop a color blend to your specificat­ions. It’s moderately priced and you can customize how often you want a shipment (esalon.com, $22-$27.50).

“I was flabbergas­ted by the dire warnings you gave about dyeing your own hair. Just take a little time and care, follow the directions on the box and you’ll be fine.”

I swear by Clairol Root Touch-up Permanent Creme. I only mix half a box at a time (drugstores, $7).”

“If you can wash your hair you can color it.”

I wrote to you several years ago about the scourge of cropped pants and how unattracti­ve they made me, a short woman, look. Now I’m seeing wide legged cropped pants in ads and catalogs and on the shopping channels. I ask who would look good in those?

Nobody. Call them what you will, they’re capris. Capris aren’t flattering and these widelegged capri-length hybrids are even less so.

My beautiful leather sofa — the centerpiec­e of my living room — is peeling, bubbling and flaking. How can I fix it?

They might have called it “leather” when you bought it but leather repair pros will tell you that your first mistake was to buy a “bonded leather” sofa. Yes, this recycled product — made from leather scraps that otherwise would be thrown away — is eco-friendly. No, it won’t hold up like top grain leather — which doesn’t bubble, peel or flake. You know you’re in trouble when the manufactur­ers of products to repair your problem say in their own promotiona­l materials, “If you try to repair this kind of leather and it doesn’t last, please remember it’s not the repair products that fail, it’s the bonded leather that fails.” Rub ’n Restore Inc. on YouTube shows an attempted repair job on a bonded leather desk chair. It’s a multistep, multiprodu­ct, multiday repair job. It looks good. If you’re just going to put the chair — same goes for your sofa — in a corner and never sit on it again you’re fine. Rub ’n Restore then actually did test its repair job for a month by actually using the chair. Conclusion: “Do not waste your time or your money attempting to restore this. It’s destined for the garbage.” Yes, there are multiple videos on

YouTube that offer step-bystep DIY fixes for your sofa, but you’re only buying some time before the repair job fails and you’re sofa shopping.

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