Fashion disaster: Woman leaves stylist with chemical burns on her scalp
Filed under: Hair Care
So here we are, on the brink of a brand new year -- what better time to try a new look? That's what Kareim Ugarte was thinking when she stopped into her local salon, and asked to have her hair color changed from brown to blond. Only that's not what happened. Instead of the blond locks she was after, Ugarte wound up looking like a junior high kid with a bad bleach job, complete with an orange and yellow coiffure. Oh, the humanity! But what's worse, way worse, is that she also wound up in the emergency room -- with chemical burns.
Ugarte told a local reporter that "It was with blisters and a lot of liquid coming out of the areas," which probably looked about as gross as it sounds.
The culprit was a JC Penney's Styling Salon -- who not only injured their customer (allegedly), but then charged her $150.
I smell a lawsuit.
JEANNE 12-31-2007 @ 3:20PM
''PCPENNEY'S IS TOO ESPENTIVE, AND DOES BADD JOBES'
Reply
Easy E 12-31-2007 @ 4:56PM
Jeanne your spelling is horrific. Please do a spell check in the future before you post. This is so funny...
E 12-31-2007 @ 3:56PM
JC Penney salons are not really high quality. I paid for a haircut from a senior stylist and she just did a horrible job on it. I could have gone to super cuts and paid 10 bucks. I probably would have looked better.
Reply
Kari 12-31-2007 @ 3:56PM
Can we spell Jeanne? LOL
Reply
Wolfster 12-31-2007 @ 6:18PM
Can we punctuate, Kari?
luvingangel 12-31-2007 @ 4:01PM
thats why i don't get my hair dyed. people look trashy when they do anyway.
Reply
pj 12-31-2007 @ 4:04PM
Why would anyone go to a JC Penney for a haircut? Find a good stylist, stick with them and just pay the price. It's worth it. Also, Jeanne, pay the price for a good dictionary. It's worth it also.
Reply
David 12-31-2007 @ 4:08PM
As a salon owner I would say that when you "stop in" to a salon for a service with no prior appointment, you take huge risks. Theres a reason you can "get right in" Youre going to be worked on by someone whos brand new with no clientele, in which case youre good practice for that person. A stylist with experience would know that there are definate limits when taking someone from dark to light and one worth his or her salt would have suggested alternatives rather than "snatch the cash".Theres no good excuse.
Reply
iampeter 12-31-2007 @ 6:46PM
I agree but it also isn't said if the person had previous hair coloring. For all we know she had fried hair already and just wanted a change...can't really do bleach blond on died hair without consequences. My wife is a hair stylist and has told me so many stories of women who want to go from dark to light after going dark and how much of a fit they have when she denies them. She doesn't need the responsibility of damaging the hair and asks the client to go somewhere else if they won't wait.
The Goddess Athena 12-31-2007 @ 4:11PM
I can bleach my almost black hair to a platinum blonde using L'oreal hair products.
That would be the safest way to go...you can be sure they have tested that formula many times.
Reply
BumbleBee 12-31-2007 @ 5:56PM
Yes, TGA your right! Salons would have you believe you are destroying your hair by doing it yourself.
I have been coloring my hair from the darkest brown to light golden blond for 28 years.
I have a guy, I go to him and him only to get a cut and style, but I trust no one to color my hair, but me.
Also, who cares if Jeanne can't spell, you all don't know her circumstances.
Ice 12-31-2007 @ 4:18PM
Really first off, JC Penny’s does do a bad job and does seem to have problems with their lazy unreliable stylist. But, if she sad to the stylist, she was feeling Burning then they would have washed it out. If for the Seven Hours, like she claims to have been in there for, Not once she complain about the burning, then really I don’t buy that she’s telling the truth and is just looking for a lawsuit.
Chemical Burns just don’t happen six hours later, they are likely to happen within the first ten minutes. For she to claim the details she gives of her burns then she sat there for the full 30 minutes allowing it to continue to burn and never once said a word about it. I am sure this is the first time she’s had her hair colored. Once it’s washed out, the burning stops and they could have added cream if she had spoken up. If she picks at it then I am sure her end result of her burns she received that sent her to the ER 4 hours after are from her doing.
So really I can’t buy this story. Maybe she just couldn’t get the color that she wanted since Her hair was almost Black and didn’t want to pay the $150.
It would turn reddish or orange going from Drake Brown / Black to Blond. Last off if her burns were as bad as she states then her hair would have also fell out and broken off and we would have heard about that too.
Maybe story telling and looking for fast and easy money is just something in her nationality!
Reply
Karen 12-31-2007 @ 4:21PM
Being prematurely gray (silver, actually), I dye my hair quite frequently. I switched from red to auburn and now to blonde to go with the natural color. I also use L'oreal products.
However, I wanted to comment on the poster who mentioned go to a stylist and pay the costs. Not all stylists charge a lot of money. I live in a small town and go to a local shop ran by two ladies. They have very reasonable rates but are still up on all the latest techniques. Also, they sell their products (Redkin, Paul Mitchell, etc.) just above their costs. I know this because I can buy the same product at an outlet store for almost twice what I pay them. BUT - I agree that you should find one person (whether cheap or pricey) and stay with them. They'll get to know your hair, your personality, etc., and can offer suggestions on new styles.
Reply
Megan 12-31-2007 @ 4:25PM
I am a hair stylest and let me tell you, before I do any chemicals on anyone I tell them what could happen. What happen to this women is not un-heard of. The fact that the womens hair turned orange is not uncomment either! That is what happens when you try to be a blonde and have brown Hair. If you were ment to be a blonde you would have been born that way.
Reply
iowayanksfan 12-31-2007 @ 4:27PM
I have gone for many years to La James school of Cosmotology and only once received a bad hair cut but have never had a bad color ing job. these r students who have every step checked by an instructor. it takes longer but is 2/3 the price of a regular salon plus the stylists get credit for school. the stylists r required to do a certain amount of different things with hair to graduate (such as straightening, curling, coloring, cuts etc). my daughter had a gift certificate for JC Penneys and used it in their salon. awful!!! we were lucky, we got her money back and then went to La James to have it fixed.
Reply
Joyce 12-31-2007 @ 4:31PM
I have been dying my hair various shades for years myself. I've been blonde, brown, and now red, thanks to L'Oreal. I now use L'Oreal Experte, with the highlights, and do a pretty good job. At least if I mess up, it's my fault! I agree, if it was burning, she should have said something sooner.
Reply
Malissa 12-31-2007 @ 4:39PM
I have dark brown hair and have no problem bleaching mine out. I'm not even a stylist. Sounds to me like this woman had already dyed her hair and the "bleaching" was unable to take out the color from the permanently stained ends. Bleaching won't do that, it has to be cut out most of the time. Seven hours??? They would have had to be doing (for some reason) several treatments. Which you should never have more than one per sitting anyway. Even I know that.
Reply
thea 12-31-2007 @ 5:02PM
My hair is thinning and I am considering "bonding." Does anyone know
of this method and how safe is it???
Reply
widdleswife 12-31-2007 @ 5:05PM
Caveat emptor... but the client also bears some of the responsibility. She should have spoken up at the first burning/tingling sensation, no matter how timid she might be. Once went to a reputable salon to get lowlights. They turned out olive green. I calmly said, "This isn't working. What can we do to fix it?" The owner was called in (it was her day off) and she worked her magic, as nice and polite as could be. Moral: SAY SOMETHING while you still have hair to salvage!
Reply
Krisi 12-31-2007 @ 5:19PM
From my understanding, it is not impossible for an allergic reaction, burns or rash, to show up after the chemicals are washed out. That's the reason the home coloring tells you to do an allergy test 48 hrs. before you dye your hair.
The comments suggesting it's impossible to change your natural hair color drastically without looking "trashy" or winding up with some terrible shade is untrue, however. My natural hair color is a very dark auburn, but I've had light brown, black, blonde and now, red. All have looked natural, to the point of people asking me with some shades if I dye my hair or if it's my own color. Furthermore, I've usually done my own hair at home and the last time I went to a hairdresser to have it done, she messed it up so badly, I had to cut four inches off the ends and fix it myself with box dye. How good hair dye looks depends on whether you pick shades flattering to your skin tone and how much experience the stylist has, regardless of whether or not it's the color you're born with.
Reply