Need a quick touch-up? Colorsonic cartridges store the unused pigments and developer separately, so you can stash your leftovers and touch up later with perfect portions of freshly-mixed dye.
Not only does the device’s on-demand dye mixing cut down on wasted hair dye, but it also can cut down on single-use materials. Colorsonic’s recyclable cartridges use less plastic per application than home box hair color, the company says in a press release.
Coming to a store near you... eventually — The Colorsonic has been in development for five years, but it’s still not quite ready to hit shelves. L’Oréal plans to release test batches at the end of this year with a large-scale launch in early 2023. The company has not disclosed how much it will cost.
AI hair color — At-home colorists aren’t the only ones getting new beauty tech. Salons can check out Colorright, an AI-connected hair color system that uses “Virtual Try-on to project desired shades” and an “algorithm that leads to an on-demand, customized hair color with more than 1500 custom shades.”
The machine will analyze the client’s hair to determine a personal hair color formula with over 1,500 possibilities. Factors measured include hair color, gray percentage, length, and density. Colorsonic will combine base creams, developers, and diluters to create an “ultra-precise” hair color formula.