35 Gorgeous Peekaboo Highlights
35 Gorgeous Peekaboo Highlights Highlights can be applied using so many different techniques, but they’re…
Highlights date back to ancient Greek and Roman women using saffron and lemon juice to lighten strands in the sun.





Highlights date back to ancient Greek and Roman women using saffron and lemon juice to lighten strands in the sun. The modern foil technique took off in the 1940s and has since branched into dozens of sub-techniques, from precise cap highlights to freehand painting methods like balayage and babylights. At its simplest, highlighting means lifting select strands lighter than your base color to add dimension, movement, and the illusion of thicker hair.
The technique and placement change based on what you're starting with. Fine, straight hair picks up highlights fast, sometimes in 15 minutes under foil. Coarse or resistant hair can need 45+ minutes of processing. On curly or wavy hair, a skilled colorist places highlights where the curl catches light, which looks completely different from a straight-hair placement. Face shape factors in too: chunky highlights around the face open up round features, while softer babylights blend into longer face shapes without adding width. If you spend a lot of time outdoors, know that highlighted hair shifts faster with sun and chlorine exposure.
The range of highlight styles is broad. Classic foil highlights give you that traditional salon-fresh dimension with controlled placement. Balayage highlights are hand-painted, so the color grows out naturally without a harsh root line. Most balayage clients get 4-5 months between appointments. For a subtle, lived-in effect, sombre keeps the contrast gentle. Peekaboo highlights place color underneath surface layers so the effect only appears with movement or updos, which is great if bold color is frowned upon at work. Caramel highlights work especially well on medium to dark brown bases, and color melt blends multiple shades without visible demarcation lines.
Traditional foil highlights need retouching every 6-8 weeks, running $120-250 per session depending on your market and how much hair gets foiled. Balayage stretches to 12-16 weeks because the grow-out is intentional. Between appointments, a sulfate-free shampoo and a purple or blue toning conditioner once a week prevents brassiness. Heat styling accelerates color fade, so use a heat protectant with UV filters every time. Budget roughly $50-80 per year on maintenance products.
Bring reference photos to your appointment showing the exact placement and tone you want. Specify whether you want face-framing pieces, all-over dimension, or concentrated lightness at the ends. Use the AI try-on tool to preview different highlight placements on your own face before committing.

Covers the most-requested highlighting technique in salons right now with practical examples across multiple hair types and base colors.

Essential reference for anyone with dark hair considering highlights — shows realistic results and addresses the specific challenges of lightening dark bases.

Clears up the single most common point of confusion clients bring to the salon chair, with side-by-side comparisons.
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A full head of foil highlights takes 2-3 hours including sectioning, application, 25-45 minutes of processing, rinsing, toning (15-20 minutes), and blow-dry styling. Partial highlights covering just the face frame and top section run about 90 minutes total. Balayage sessions take 2-2.5 hours because the hand-painting requires the colorist to work section by section with varying saturation. Add an extra 30-45 minutes if you are lifting 4+ levels from a dark base, since the stylist may need to rinse and re-apply lightener or do a double toning process to neutralize orange and yellow undertones.
All lightening involves opening the hair's cuticle layer with an alkaline formula so bleach can dissolve melanin pigment inside the cortex — this permanently changes the hair's protein structure in the treated sections. The damage level depends on how many levels you lift and the developer volume: going 2-3 shades lighter with 20-volume developer causes minimal structural change you can manage with conditioning. Lifting 5+ levels from dark brown to platinum with 30-40 volume developer leaves hair noticeably drier, more porous, and prone to snapping. Highlights damage less total hair than all-over color because they only treat 30-50% of strands.
Yes, but dark base colors (levels 1-4) require longer processing time — often 35-50 minutes in foils versus 25-30 for lighter bases — and careful monitoring. The first lift on dark hair always reveals warm undertones (copper, orange, or gold) because those are the underlying pigments in dark melanin; this is chemistry, not a mistake. Toner applied after rinsing neutralizes these warm tones to your desired shade, processing for 10-20 minutes.
Traditional highlights use aluminum foils to isolate thin sections of hair, apply lightener evenly from root to tip, and process in a sealed packet. This creates uniform, evenly spaced brightness with a noticeable pattern when grown out. Balayage is a French freehand technique where the colorist paints lightener onto the surface of hair sections without foils, concentrating more product at the ends and less at the roots. The result is a gradual, sun-kissed gradient that grows out softly over 10-16 weeks. Foil highlights provide brighter, more consistent lift and work better for dramatic blonde results.
Brassiness occurs because the cool toner molecules deposited on top of your highlights are smaller than the warm pigment molecules underneath — they wash out faster, exposing the yellow-orange base. Use purple shampoo (like Fanola No Yellow or Redken Color Extend Blondage) once a week for blonde highlights — leave it on for 3-5 minutes, not longer, or hair turns violet. For highlighted brown hair, use blue shampoo (like Matrix Brass Off) to counteract orange tones specifically. Wash with lukewarm water instead of hot — heat opens the cuticle and strips toner 30-40% faster.
For home highlights, a cap-and-hook kit is the simplest method: pull on the silicone cap, use the hook to pull thin strands through the holes, apply lightener to the exposed strands, and process for 20-35 minutes depending on your starting color. Kits from Clairol or Revlon ($12-18) include the lightener, developer, and cap. The cap method works best for all-over scattered highlights on short to medium-length hair. For longer hair, foil kits let you paint lightener onto sections and wrap them individually — this gives more control over placement but requires a second set of hands for the back sections.
Partial highlights (face frame and crown, 15-25 foils) cost $80-150 at most salons. A full head of foil highlights (40-80+ foils) runs $150-300 depending on the salon's tier, your hair length, and your geographic area. Major cities (NYC, LA, Chicago) average $200-350+; suburban and rural salons run $120-200. Balayage highlights cost $180-300+ because the freehand technique takes more time and skill. Add $30-50 for a toner, which is almost always needed after highlighting. Touch-up appointments (every 8-16 weeks) cost 20-30% less than a first-time full head since you are only lifting new growth.
Do not wash your hair the day of or the day before your highlight appointment. Your scalp's natural oils form a protective barrier that reduces irritation and burning during the lightening process — bleach on a freshly washed, oil-free scalp can cause stinging, redness, and sensitivity. Arrive with 1-2 day unwashed hair that is free of heavy product buildup (skip hairspray and heavy serums in the days before). If your hair has significant product buildup from waxes or dry shampoo, wash it 2 nights before the appointment and skip products afterward.
The balayage-style painting technique lets you highlight hair at home without foils. Mix lightener and developer in a bowl, then use a color brush or even an old toothbrush to paint the mixture onto the surface of individual hair sections, concentrating on the mid-lengths and ends while leaving roots untouched. Place plastic wrap between painted sections to prevent color transfer — it is lighter and easier to manage than foil. The cap-and-hook method is another foil-free option: pull strands through a perforated cap and apply lightener to the exposed hair. Without foils, processing takes slightly longer (30-40 minutes vs.
Highlights are permanent lightening — the bleach permanently removes melanin from the treated strands, so the lightened hair never reverts to its original color. What fades is the toner applied over the highlights: that cool, ashy, or beige tone washes out over 4-8 weeks, leaving the raw lifted blonde (often warm or brassy) underneath. The highlights themselves stay until they grow out, which takes 3-6 months to become noticeably grown-out depending on the placement technique. Foil highlights from the root show regrowth within 6-8 weeks.