20 Fresh Blunt Bob Haircut Ideas for Summer 2026 That Feel Stylish and Effortless

When Zendaya showed up to the 2026 Met Gala with a razor-sharp jaw-length bob — no layers, no texture, just pure geometric precision — my phone didn’t stop buzzing for three days. Suddenly every client walking into the salon had the same screenshot saved, and TikTok’s #BluntBobSummer tag crossed 2.8 billion views before Memorial Day. But here’s what makes this wave different from the bob renaissances of years past: the color work happening alongside these cuts is genuinely next-level. Colorists are pairing the clean lines with shades like “Espresso Martini,” “Liquid Mercury,” and “Nectarine Glaze” — names that sound like cocktails but look like art on a one-length cut. The blunt bob in 2026 isn’t just a haircut; it’s a full visual statement, and salon booking platforms are reporting a 47% surge in bob-specific appointments since April.

This roundup of gorgeous summer blunt bob haircut 2026 ideas spans the full spectrum — from ultra-short nape-length cuts that barely graze the neck to collarbone-skimming lobs with blunt perimeters that still technically count. Whether you’ve got fine hair that needs the illusion of density (blunt ends are your best friend), thick coarse texture that craves structure, a round face that benefits from jaw-skimming angles, or an oval shape that can pull off literally anything here, there’s a version for you. These aren’t cookie-cutter bobs — every look in this collection was chosen for its dimension, technique, and real-world wearability. Some require a flat iron and five minutes; others you can air-dry and forget.

I’ll be honest — I resisted the blunt bob for years. My hair is fine, slightly wavy, and I was convinced I needed layers to avoid looking like a medieval page boy. Then my colorist talked me into a chin-length blunt cut with a subtle root smudge, and I haven’t looked back. Sometimes the simplest shape is the most transformative.


The Sleek Espresso Blunt Bob with Center Part

If your vibe is “architect who also happens to be effortlessly stunning,” this is the cut. The espresso blunt bob relies on a single-process application in the Level 3-4 range — deep, cool-toned brown with just enough reflection to avoid looking flat under indoor lighting. The key technical detail here is the interior texturizing: while the perimeter stays completely blunt and one-length, a point-cut through the interior panels removes bulk without disrupting that clean bottom line. The center part amplifies the symmetry, and when paired with a charcoal turtleneck, the whole thing feels very “creative director at a design firm in Copenhagen.” A sleek blunt bob like this demands precision from your stylist — the slightest unevenness shows on straight, dark hair (which is both its beauty and its challenge).

Expect this cut to hold its shape for about six weeks before the ends start to look uneven, at which point a quick trim appointment — not a full restyle — keeps everything sharp. You’ll want a lightweight smoothing serum and a ceramic flat iron for styling, which takes roughly five to seven minutes on clean hair. Color-wise, this depth of espresso barely fades, so a salon refresh every ten to twelve weeks with a demi-permanent gloss is plenty. Skip if your hair has a lot of natural wave and you’re unwilling to heat-style — the magic here is in the mirror-flat finish. Quiet confidence, amplified.


The Ash-Toned Glass Hair Blunt Bob

The glass hair blunt bob had its moment in 2024, disappeared briefly, and came roaring back this summer with cooler, ashier undertones than before. Achieving this particular shade — a Level 8 ash with violet-based toner to neutralize any warmth — typically requires a double-process if you’re starting from natural brunette, which puts the initial appointment in the $250–$400 range depending on your market. The “glass” effect comes from a combination of the blunt cut (no layers to break up light reflection) and a finishing treatment like a keratin gloss or bond-building spray that physically smooths the cuticle layer. When it catches light, it literally looks like polished metal, which is the entire point.

This shade is high-maintenance, and I won’t sugarcoat it — purple shampoo twice a week is non-negotiable, and you’ll need a toner refresh every four to five weeks to keep brassiness at bay. The cut itself is more forgiving, needing a trim every six to eight weeks. I tested this exact shade on a client with medium-density hair last month, and the grow-out at six weeks was still presentable thanks to a root shadow at the initial appointment. Skip if you’re on well water (mineral deposits turn ash tones green faster than you’d believe). The ultimate mirror finish.


The Platinum Blunt Bob with Warm Undertone Glow

Platinum gets a bad reputation for looking harsh, but when your colorist leaves the faintest whisper of warm undertone at the root — a shadow root using a Level 7 gold-beige — the entire shade softens into something wearable rather than editorial-only. This platinum blunt bob sits right at chin length, and the blunt perimeter makes the color pop even more because every strand ends at the same point, creating a concentrated band of brightness around the face. The technique here is a full foil lift to Level 10, followed by a custom toner that leans ever so slightly warm instead of the ice-white that most people default to (my colorist calls it “champagne platinum,” and frankly, she’s right to charge extra for it).

Upkeep is the real conversation. You’re looking at salon visits every three to four weeks for root touch-ups if you’re naturally dark, or every five to six weeks if you’re a natural Level 7 or lighter. Bond treatments — Olaplex No. 3 or K18 at home, professional bond repair in-salon — are mandatory, not optional. Budget roughly $150–$200 per maintenance visit. The styling, however, is dead simple: blow-dry with a paddle brush, done. Skip if you’re not willing to commit financially or if your hair is already compromised from previous chemical processing. Expensive taste, tangible results.


The Espresso Martini Box Bob

The box bob is what happens when a blunt bob gets even more geometric — the sides are cut to create a slightly squared-off silhouette rather than the typical rounded shape, and on dark espresso hair, the effect is striking. Think of it as the architectural version of the blunt bob haircut 2026, where the cut’s engineering is the statement rather than the color. The perimeter is razor-cut (not shear-cut) to achieve that ultra-precise edge, and the interior is kept heavy with minimal texturizing to maintain maximum density through the sides. A deep side part shifts the weight asymmetrically, which prevents the geometric shape from reading too severe on softer face shapes.

Shape retention on a box bob is exceptional — because there’s no layering to grow out unevenly, this cut genuinely looks good from week one through week eight before the length starts to lose its intention. A smoothing blow-dry takes about ten minutes, or you can wrap-set overnight for zero-heat glass finish. The espresso shade, achieved through a demi-permanent gloss over natural Level 4-5 hair, adds incredible shine without commitment — it fades gradually over six to eight weeks and never leaves a hard line. Skip if you have very fine hair, as the box silhouette requires a certain amount of natural density to hold its shape. Geometry, but make it fashion.


The Minimalist Nape-Length Blunt Bob

There’s something deeply satisfying about a nape-blunt bob that ends exactly where it should and not a millimeter longer. This is the most pared-back version of the summer blunt bob — no color tricks, no styling gymnastics, just a Level 2-3 natural dark shade and a cut so clean it looks like it was done with a laser. The technique is deceptively simple but requires a highly skilled stylist: the guide is set at the occipital bone, the perimeter is blunt-cut while the hair is wet and combed perfectly smooth, and then dry-cut adjustments handle any natural growth patterns that might cause the line to break. On straight to mildly wavy hair, the result is architectural without trying.

This is genuinely the lowest-maintenance option in the entire roundup. If your hair is naturally straight and dark, you’re looking at a trim every six to eight weeks and virtually no daily styling — maybe a drop of argan oil on the ends and you’re out the door in under two minutes. The nape length blunt bob also happens to be incredibly flattering on long necks and defined jawlines, as it essentially frames both. No color means no color maintenance, no purple shampoo, no gloss appointments. Skip if you have a very round face shape, as the short length without any length in front can emphasize width rather than creating the elongation most people prefer. Less is genuinely more.


The Liquid Mercury Platinum Blunt Bob

If the previous platinum was champagne, this is straight-up liquid mercury — cooler, edgier, and about as close to silver as you can get without crossing into gray territory. The platinum blunt bob in this iteration uses a violet-silver toner over a Level 10 lift, and the result in person is genuinely mesmerizing, especially outdoors where it catches every possible angle of light. My colorist recommends this shade specifically for clients with cool or neutral skin undertones (pink or olive), as warm complexions can look washed out when the hair pulls this strongly cool. The cut sits just below the jaw, and the blunt perimeter is essential — layers would diffuse the reflective quality that makes this color work.

Let me be straight about the maintenance reality: this is a salon-every-four-weeks situation. The toner fades fast, especially with heat styling and sun exposure (both of which are kind of unavoidable in summer), and without regular toning, you’ll drift into a brassy yellow-silver that looks unintentional. Budget $120–$180 per toning session. At home, a bonding purple shampoo like Fanola No Yellow is your best friend, alternated with a hydrating mask twice weekly. The styling itself is minimal — this shade looks best air-dried or blown out with a round brush for smoothness. Skip if summer for you means daily pool time or extended beach vacations, because chlorine and UV will eat this color alive. Silver screen energy.


The Sun-Kissed Blonde Blunt Bob for Convertible Season

Not every blunt bob needs to be severe — this version proves that a one-length cut can feel completely carefree, especially when paired with a warm Level 8-9 blonde that looks like it happened naturally over three weeks of beach time (even though it absolutely did not). The technique here is a freehand balayage focusing on the face-framing pieces and the ends, over a base that’s been lifted to a warm honey tone. Because the bob is blunt at the perimeter but the color has built-in dimension through the balayage, you get movement and visual interest without a single layer. It’s the summer bob hairstyle that photographs effortlessly — the kind of hair that makes people ask “did you do something different?” without being able to pinpoint exactly what.

The grow-out on this color is genuinely beautiful, which is the whole advantage of balayage on a bob — as it grows, the lightened ends simply become a more subtle ombré effect. Expect to refresh the tone every eight to ten weeks and get a trim every six weeks to maintain the blunt line. Styling is wash-and-go friendly: scrunch with a sea salt spray for texture or blow-dry smooth for a polished look, both take under ten minutes. This works on virtually every hair texture from straight to wavy, and suits warm and neutral skin tones best. Skip if you want something high-contrast and dramatic — this is deliberately sun-drenched and easy. Barefoot luxury.


The Sculpted Dark Brunette Blunt Bob — 360° View

I included a 360-degree view of this cut intentionally, because the back of a blunt bob matters just as much as the front — arguably more, since it’s what everyone behind you in the coffee line actually sees. This sculpted version features a slight graduation through the back (maybe 5 degrees, barely perceptible from the front) that creates a subtle rounded shape when viewed from behind, while the front pieces hang about half an inch longer to frame the jaw. The color is a rich Level 3 cool brunette, enhanced with a clear gloss treatment that adds approximately 40% more shine than unglossed hair (yes, that’s a real statistic my product rep shared, and yes, I’ve verified it visually on about thirty clients). A short blunt bob haircut with this kind of shaping precision is what separates a $45 haircut from a $120 one.

The structure here means this cut actually improves as it grows out — the slight back graduation prevents the dreaded “triangle head” effect that plagues blunt bobs on thick hair around week six. Maintenance is a trim every seven to eight weeks, with a gloss treatment every four to six weeks to maintain that wet-look shine. You’ll need a boar bristle brush and medium-hold hairspray for the smoothest finish. Skip if your hair is very fine and flat, as the graduation requires some density to read as intentional rather than just uneven. The detail is in the back.


The Honey Blonde Salon-Fresh Blunt Bob

Honey blonde is having its biggest moment since the early 2000s, but the 2026 version is warmer, richer, and less stripey than anything you remember from that era. This bob uses a foilayage technique — foils placed in a balayage pattern — to create a golden Level 8 with subtle Level 9 highlights concentrated at the ends and around the face. The base stays a natural Level 6-7, which means the root area blends seamlessly as it grows, eliminating that harsh regrowth line. The blunt perimeter keeps it modern rather than “beachy mom” (no offense to beachy moms, but we’re going for editorial here), and the length sits right at the collarbone, making it the longest bob in this roundup while still qualifying as a trendy blunt bob style.

Foilayage on a bob this length typically runs $200–$350 depending on your starting color and desired level of lift. The good news is maintenance is genuinely manageable — touch-ups every ten to twelve weeks, with a gloss refresh at the six-week mark to keep warmth looking intentional rather than brassy. At home, a sulfate-free shampoo and a weekly hair mask are all you need. Styling takes about eight minutes with a blow-dryer and round brush, or you can air-dry for a more relaxed, slightly textured finish. Skip if you strongly prefer cool tones — honey will always lean warm, and fighting it with toner defeats the purpose entirely. Golden hour, all day.


The Espresso Blunt Bob for City Girls

Some bobs scream “beach weekend” and others scream “corner office” — this espresso blunt bob is firmly in the latter camp. The color is a single-process Level 3-4 with neutral-to-cool undertones, applied as a permanent base color that delivers full gray coverage if needed (a detail that matters more than people admit). What makes this version special is the length placement: it hits exactly at the bottom of the jaw, which creates a clean frame for the face without the severity of a shorter chin-length cut. The blunt ends are razor-finished for a slightly softer edge — not wispy, just less blunt than shear-cut ends, which adds a tiny bit of movement at the tips without sacrificing the one-length silhouette.

For the woman who doesn’t want to think about her hair but wants it to look polished every single day, this is it. Blow-dry time is under ten minutes, and honestly, second-day hair with this cut looks better than first-day because the natural oils add weight and smoothness. The espresso shade maintains beautifully — you’re looking at a touch-up every six to eight weeks for color, and a trim on the same schedule. Total salon time per visit: about ninety minutes. Skip if you want high-contrast drama or visible highlights — the beauty here is in the uniform, saturated depth. Boardroom-ready, always.


The Black Cherry Soda Blunt Bob

Here’s the shade I’ve been most excited about all summer — “Black Cherry Soda” is my name for this particular burgundy-plum that sits somewhere between Level 4 and Level 5, with red-violet undertones that shift between wine and chocolate depending on the lighting. It’s achieved through a double-process: a base lift to Level 6, followed by a semi-permanent deposit in a custom-mixed burgundy formula. The blunt bob cut amplifies the color’s depth because the uniform ends create a concentrated band of richness at the bottom, almost like the hair has been dipped in merlot. This is a copper blunt bob’s moody cousin — same attention-grabbing energy, completely different personality.

The semi-permanent application is both a pro and a con: it fades beautifully over six to eight weeks into a softer, rosé-tinted brunette (which many clients actually prefer to the fresh application), but it also means your shower will look like a crime scene for the first three washes. Use lukewarm water, a color-depositing conditioner once a week, and keep shampoo sessions to two to three times per week maximum. The cut needs refreshing every six to seven weeks. Skip if you’re committed to blonde — removing red-violet pigment from hair is a multi-session, expensive process if you change your mind. Dark, delicious, unapologetic.


The Nectarine Glaze Copper Blunt Bob — Full 360°

Copper is the color that simply will not quit, and in a blunt bob silhouette, it looks like a freshly minted penny — which I mean as the highest possible compliment. This “Nectarine Glaze” version is a Level 7 copper with strong orange undertones, achieved through a permanent color application on pre-lightened hair (if starting dark) or a direct dye application on natural Level 6-7 bases. The four-angle view here shows why the blunt cut matters: from the back, you can see how the one-length perimeter catches light uniformly, creating that signature copper shimmer from every direction. The blunt bob haircut 2026 trend has been particularly kind to copper shades because the geometric lines give structure to what could otherwise be an overwhelming amount of warmth.

Copper is famously the fastest-fading hair color family, so prepare accordingly: a color-depositing shampoo (like Celeb Luxury Gem Lites in Tourmaline) every other wash, a sulfate-free routine, and a toner refresh every four to five weeks. The cut holds its shape well for six to eight weeks. One thing I love about copper on a blunt bob is that even as it fades, it transitions through beautiful stages — from vibrant tangerine to soft peach to strawberry blonde. Skip if you have very pink or ruddy skin, as this much warm pigment near your face can amplify redness. Penny bright, spotlight ready.


The Ash Blonde Precision-Cut Blunt Bob — Back View

I specifically chose a back-view shot for this one because the precision of a blunt cut is most visible — and most impressive — from behind. The ash blonde shade here is approximately Level 8-9 with a strong violet-ash base that eliminates warmth entirely, and the cut is so mathematically even that you could set a level on it. This kind of precision typically requires a stylist cutting on dry hair (wet cutting introduces shrinkage variables that can throw off a blunt line), working section by section from the nape upward, checking the line in a mirror after each pass. The result is a bob that looks like it was cut by a machine — in the best possible way.

Because this is the back view, let’s talk about what nobody mentions: nape maintenance. If you have a low or uneven hairline, a nape-length blunt bob will require your stylist to clean up the neckline at every visit, either with a razor or clippers. Budget for a six-week trim cycle. The ash tone needs purple shampoo maintenance as discussed earlier, and this particular shade photographs beautifully in natural light, which makes it disproportionately popular among content creators and people who are frequently on camera. Skip if you have a cowlick at the nape — it will fight the blunt line endlessly and cause frustration between appointments. Precision is the point.


The Rich Brunette Glass-Finish Blunt Bob — 360° Salon View

This is my “if you can only pick one” recommendation for anyone considering a blunt bob summer 2026 look. The rich brunette shade — a Level 4 neutral brown with the faintest cool undertone — is universally flattering and essentially foolproof, which is not something I say lightly. The glass-finish effect comes from a professional keratin smoothing gloss applied after the cut (not a full keratin treatment, just the topcoat), which seals the cuticle and creates light reflection that borders on supernatural. The four-angle salon view reveals the cut’s perfect symmetry and the way light travels seamlessly from crown to ends without interruption — that’s what a zero-layer blunt bob does when executed correctly.

The practical beauty of this look is that it’s genuinely low-effort once you’ve invested in the initial appointment. The keratin gloss lasts four to six weeks before gradually washing out, and during that window, your blow-dry time drops by about 50% and frizz essentially doesn’t exist (even in humidity, which matters for summer). The color requires touch-ups every eight weeks for full coverage, and the cut needs reshaping every six to seven weeks. Cost-wise, budget $100–$150 for the cut and $50–$80 for the gloss treatment. Skip if you specifically want texture or movement — this look is designed to be sleek and flat, full stop. The one that works for everyone.


The Tousled Blonde Wavy Blunt Bob

Not every blunt bob has to be straight — in fact, some of the best ones this summer are deliberately tousled. This wavy blunt bob proves that you can maintain a blunt perimeter while still having texture, movement, and that “I woke up like this” energy. The trick is in the styling rather than the cut: the ends are cut blunt, but a 1.25-inch curling iron used to create alternating direction waves from the ear down gives the illusion of a more relaxed, lived-in shape. The blonde is a babylight-heavy balayage in the Level 8-9 range with a neutral-warm base, creating dimension that accentuates each wave’s peak and valley. Salons are calling this the “vacation bob,” and I can’t argue with the branding.

The tousled texture is the easiest style in this roundup to achieve at home — a wave spray, three minutes of scrunching, and air-drying gets you 80% of the way there. The cut holds its shape for six to eight weeks even with the wave pattern, because the perimeter is still one-length and doesn’t look uneven as it grows. Color maintenance follows standard balayage rules: refresh every ten to twelve weeks, with a toner touch-up at six weeks if you want to keep brassiness in check. This is the most forgiving bob on the list for fine hair, since the waves create the volume that a straight blunt bob sometimes can’t. Skip if you hate all products in your hair — the wave needs something to hold it. Effortless, genuinely this time.


The Chin-Length Ash Brunette Blunt Bob

The jaw-skimming blunt bob is arguably the most classic length in this entire collection, and this ash brunette version nails it. Sitting right at the chin — not above, not below — creates a frame around the lower face that’s universally flattering on oval, heart, and diamond face shapes. The color is a Level 5-6 cool brunette with ash undertones that prevent any warmth from creeping in, achieved through a demi-permanent gloss over natural or pre-toned hair. The finish is smooth but not aggressively sleek, which makes this look equally appropriate for a Monday meeting and a Saturday brunch. No one’s going to guess this bob costs as much as it does, which is exactly the energy we want.

The demi-permanent color here is the hero for low-commitment types: it fades gradually over six to eight weeks with no harsh regrowth line, depositing tone without lift, which means zero damage. You can re-gloss at home with an in-shower product like dpHUE Gloss+ if you want to stretch time between salon visits. The cut needs a trim every five to six weeks, as chin-length bobs show length changes faster than longer styles — even a quarter inch of growth shifts the relationship between the cut line and your jawline. Skip if you want high-impact color drama — this is intentionally subtle and sophisticated. Perfectly understated.


The Vibrant Copper Textured Blunt Bob

While the earlier copper entry was more of a polished penny, this version turns the volume up to a full nectarine — it’s brighter, oranger, and deliberately more textured in its finish. The color sits at a Level 7-8 copper with strong orange concentration, and the technique involves a pre-lightened base with a vivid copper deposit that borders on fashion color territory. What I love about pairing this shade with a blunt bob is the contrast between the wild, attention-grabbing color and the controlled, geometric shape — it’s like wearing a sequin top with tailored trousers. The slight texturizing through the mid-lengths and ends creates movement while the perimeter stays definitively blunt. This is the copper blunt bob for people who want to be noticed.

The intensity of this copper means it will start fading from the moment you leave the salon — that’s just the nature of high-lift vivid deposits. Color-depositing conditioners (Overtone in Vibrant Copper, used every other wash) are essential for extending the vibrancy between appointments, which should be every four to five weeks for full refresh. The cut is refreshed every six weeks. Style-wise, this looks incredible air-dried with a texturizing cream for that lived-in feel, or blown out for maximum impact. Skip if you work in a very conservative corporate environment where an unusual hair color might raise eyebrows — this shade is unapologetically loud. Maximum copper, zero apologies.


The Textured Blonde French-Girl Blunt Bob

The French-girl bob is a specific sub-genre of the blunt bob that prioritizes imperfection — deliberate imperfection, styled to look like you haven’t styled at all. This version uses a warm Level 8 blonde with subtle darker roots (about an inch of natural Level 6-7 showing through), and the texture comes from a combination of razored interior layers and a styling technique that involves twisting damp sections and air-drying. The perimeter is blunt but the overall effect is soft, undone, and completely unpretentious. Among the trendy blunt bob styles making waves this summer, this one has the broadest appeal because it doesn’t commit to a specific aesthetic — it reads as effortless regardless of what you’re wearing.

Maintenance on this bob is delightfully minimal. The intentionally grown-out root means you’re not chasing regrowth every month — a refresh every eight to ten weeks keeps the blonde looking deliberate rather than neglected. The cut needs reshaping every six to seven weeks, and styling takes genuinely under five minutes: scrunch with a light hold mousse, air dry, maybe tousle with your fingers once it’s 80% dry. This is the most texture-friendly option for people with natural wave or curl, as the movement is actually enhanced by your hair’s natural pattern rather than fighting against it. Skip if you like a polished, put-together look — this style is anti-polish by design, and flat-ironing it defeats the entire purpose. Perfectly imperfect.


The Warm Ginger Flip Bob

Here’s the wildcard — a blunt bob with flipped ends that feels retro-modern in the best possible way. The warm ginger shade is a Level 6-7 natural copper with golden undertones, and the flip at the ends is achieved through a round brush blow-dry technique that curls the last inch of hair outward rather than under. The result is part ’60s mod, part 2026 summer bob hairstyle, and entirely charming. The blunt cut provides the foundation (a layered cut wouldn’t flip as cleanly), while the ginger shade adds warmth that makes the whole thing feel approachable rather than costumey. I’ve seen this style trending specifically with the cottagecore and “countryside summer” aesthetic crowds on Pinterest, and it makes perfect sense.

The flip requires a blow-dry every time you wash your hair — there’s no air-dry version that achieves this exact look — so budget about twelve to fifteen minutes of styling time. The upside is that it holds all day with a light-hold hairspray and actually improves with a little humidity (the flip opens up and gets bouncier). The ginger shade fades gracefully into a warm strawberry tone over six to eight weeks, and color touch-ups every six to eight weeks keep it vibrant. Cut reshaping every six weeks. Skip if you want a modern, sharp aesthetic — this is deliberately nostalgic and soft, and it leans into that fully. Retro charm, modern confidence.


The Copper Penny Blunt Bob — Complete 360° View

I’m closing with this full 360° copper because it perfectly encapsulates why the blunt bob is the cut of summer 2026: it’s all about the precision of the line, and copper is the shade that shows it off most dramatically. This specific copper sits at a Level 7 with a perfect balance of orange and red undertones — warm enough to feel natural on the right skin tone, vivid enough to stop traffic. The four-angle view reveals something important: notice how the back and sides are cut to the exact same length, creating a uniform horizontal line that wraps around the head. That consistency is what makes a blunt bob look expensive, and it’s the detail that separates a salon cut from a DIY attempt. The 2026 bob haircut trends are leaning heavily into this kind of visible craftsmanship.

This copper penny shade will be your most salon-intensive color in this roundup, requiring a refresh every four to five weeks to maintain vibrancy, plus a cut reshaping every six weeks. At home, you’ll want a copper color-depositing mask weekly, a gentle sulfate-free shampoo, and UV protectant spray (copper fades fastest in direct sunlight). The total cost of maintaining this look runs approximately $150–$250 per month, which is a real commitment. But when you catch your reflection in a store window and your hair literally looks like it’s glowing? You’ll understand why people keep coming back for this shade. Skip if you’re looking for low-maintenance — this is high-maintenance, and it’s worth every minute. The finale-worthy copper.

Evaliya

Evaliya

Hi, I’m Evaliya, the voice behind Women Fashion Tips. I love sharing fresh outfit ideas, hairstyles, and everyday fashion inspiration. This space is where I explore trends and keep fashion simple and wearable.

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