Hi Guys. Vick here from Nashville. Strange question here, but I figure somebody out there might know something.
I had a strip procedure from a top coalition-recommended Surgeon from here. Due to a previous hair mill disaster involving the infamous crook CP Chambers out of FLorida, i had/have very limited donor, so
the doc did about 1000 grafts, maybe 1500 hairs.
My hair is very very thin, being a natural dirty-dish water blonde as they say.
Thus, the results were okay, and the doctor did a nice job in correcting some scarring up top. But its a very thin see through situation kind of like you see in lots of nordic/german type guys with thinning hair. I do a combover, and dont get me wrong, im happy to have a bit of coverage.
Basically, Im the poster boy for avoiding the cue ball situation, and getting my face framed somewhat, so Im happy enough. And Im mid forties, so the lack of density isnt such a big deal.
Question: but my conundrum is: the doc recommended going blonder, because it reflects more light. Which I did, and he was right, it looked good. But unfortunately, my hair first turned RED, and it was a pretty big hassle to get it the right shade of blonde.
I told my sister awhile ago that I wish my hair would turn silver gray. She's a former stylist, and told me "its gonna be YEARS before your hair turns gray".
Apparently, blondish/sandy/dirty dishwater blondes dont gray until their sixties or something.
She also says theres no product out there that can turn light brown hair silver gray.
Is this right? Anyone familiar with something that might work?
Lol, i might be the only guy on the planet who wishes his hair would turn silver.
The fact of the matter is, that while most HT middle age guys want to dye their gray hair brown, the best color for transplanted hair is really silver gray for middle aged guys.