Xuenou > Fashion > “Herringbone Highlights” Elevate Your Gray Hairs in the Best Way
“Herringbone Highlights” Elevate Your Gray Hairs in the Best Way
“Herringbone highlights” are a new summer hair-color trend that incorporates gray hair. Here’s how you can get the look.

“Herringbone Highlights” Elevate Your Gray Hairs in the Best Way

  • If you prefer your hair to be low-maintenance in the summer, “herringbone highlights” should be on your radar.
  • The hair-color trend incorporates a herringbone pattern that works with your grays for a natural look instead of covering them.
  • A professional hairstylist breaks down the trend and how you can achieve it.

There are two types of people in the summer: those who thrive in the hot, humid weather, and those who can’t unwrap themselves from the air conditioner for more than 30 seconds. If you fall into the latter camp, the summer months may find you wanting to do as little as physically possible to avoid the weather — and paring down your monthly hair-color appointments.

If that means skipping out on those root touch-ups for any gray hairs, we have a solution that’s as low-maintenance as it is stylish: “herringbone highlights.”

According to Tom Smith, hairstylist and international color creative director for Evo Hair, this trend makes perfect sense, given the times: “Since the pandemic, it’s wonderfully more acceptable to show your natural grays,” he tells POPSUGAR. “Celebrities such as Jennifer Aniston, Gwyneth Paltrow, and Sarah Jessica Parker are leading the way when it comes to incorporating their gray hairs into their iconic hair colors.”

So, what exactly are herringbone highlights? “Using a herringbone pattern of highlighting, various shades are woven in among the gray strands, giving a finely balanced mix of warm and cool tones,” Smith says. “The trend really celebrates gray hair by including them in a hair-color design as an additional highlight color instead of covering them up.”

If you want in on the trend but are unsure of what to ask of your stylist at the salon, Smith has a suggestion. “Ask your colorist to include your gray hair into your highlight pattern by adding a warm- and a cool-toned highlight and mixing them throughout your hair in an irregular way,” he says. “Not alternating each shade but scattering and diffusing the various shades around the irregular pattern of your own gray hair. Gray hairs tend to arrive sporadically and scattered — some even cluster into streaks — so work with this rather than fight against it for a hair-color design that is totally tailored to you.”

Keep scrolling for some of our favorite examples of “herringbone highlights.”