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They're really easy to find & use. and basically a hair stripper does just that; strips hair back to it's natural color.
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Correction. Hair strippers, or color removers will
NOT strip hair back to its natural color. It will remove artificial pigment that was deposited in the hair, but the hair will be left with whatever color the peroxide in the original dye left it. Almost all hair dyes are oxidative in nature (some exception exist). Even the darkest and blackest of these hair dyes use hydrogen peroxide as a "developer". Along with depositing pigment, hydrogen peroxide also lightens the
undertones (natural pigments in the hair). As it lightens, undertones turn redder and/or yellower (more to the orange). The exact color it turns depends on the original color of the hair, how long the peroxide was left in, and how strong it was.
Most of the time, if you remove all of the artificial pigment, you have to re-dye the hair in order to get it to a "normal" color. If you only remove some of the pigment, you may not have to do that.