 Welcome to today's video. So on the video today, what we're going to be focusing on is a dimensional color. We're going to add multi-dimension natural copper tones to this blonde canvas. So what I did was I did zigzag partings all the way separating the top and the bottom of the head. It's a good reference point to just go right at the parietal ridge and start your zigzag and work your way around. The two tones that I'm picking is 7NC Joico Demi Permanent Hair Color and then also the 10NC Natural Copper Joico with five volume. And I'm going to start by working that deeper tone into the hair. So right at that zigzag parting, I'm going to paint the 7NC and I'm going to work that through to the mid-shaft. Now I like to kind of outline the pattern first and really get that depth building up because that's where I wanted to appear the most. So I start working my way through. Then what I'm going to do is I'm going to work that down into the mid-shaft all the way through this section like you're seeing here. And then once I get to that mid-shaft, then I'm going to paint the 10NC through the ends, blending those two tones together just a little bit, creating almost like a third color. So it's lighter than a 7, but it's not as light as a 10. So just kind of pulling that through, adding that brightness to it. The brightest tone naturally should be on the very top of the head. So that's where we're going to go just with the 10NC, which I'll show you guys in a bit. Now a couple of key things I want you to notice. I paint very heavy the 7NC up into those triangles because that's where I want to create the depth and the shadow. Because if you think about natural hair underneath all those triangles, that's where the sun doesn't really hit the hair. So it definitely should naturally just be darker than the rest of the hair. So through the ends, you don't want to create that depth. So if you go back to the 90s when we were coloring hair, the early 2000s, we were coloring the bottom very dark and the top very light. This is kind of a variation of that, creating the depth in the middle, the deepest part in the middle. But then towards the ends, like everything I'm painting right now is the 10NC because I want the ends to still be light. That's what it naturally should be anyways. We're looking to create beautiful hair in the salon, not necessarily creating a two-tone look that doesn't mix and match together. So again, 7NC getting painted at the root all the way to the mid-shaft. Then once I get to the mid-shaft, I paint the 10NC through the rest of the color, blending those two colors together, doing kind of a color melting. Color melting is just short for take the one color, pull it into the other color and you get another color. So it's a pretty simple technique. Now I go through the pattern that we created on the top, which brings the depth and those triangles into it. And I'm just going straight up 10NC through the entire top of the head. And I love, like I love when you already see a color, like this is a newer color for me to work with the 10NC. But when I see it just kind of making that salmon-y color right on the top of the hair, I know it's going to sing at the very end when I get it blown dry. So I was already excited about this technique before I even process the whole thing. So you can see how the technique plays out. You can see the triangles, you can see how deep we went with them. It's just really breaking it up and adding the depth, the 10NC with five volume on top, 7NC roots to mid-shaft. And then 10NC, five volume on the ends, color melting that together to create that end result and the technique. So you can see how deep that 7NC is getting already. That's the goal. So now I go in with Joico power spray just to give it a nice hold. I want to show you guys that end result. You could see how soft and beautiful that 10NC is coming over. You could also see the depth playing out there. I'm going to show you guys some more views of that as well. As I start to brush it over, look at the 7NC, how deep it looks and the dimension that it creates and the movement it creates. This is a super layered haircut. If you guys remember seeing this haircut, I did it on a few videos ago, created a long shag bob. So you know how short these layers are. So the depth is created in there, but it's not stripy. It looks really cool. So hope you guys like the video. Let me know. Thank you so much for watching.