What Happens to Hair When It Turns Grey
Hair color is produced by melanin, a pigment created by cells called melanocytes within the hair follicle. As melanocyte activity decreases with age, less melanin is deposited into new hair growth. Fully grey or white hair contains no melanin at all.
The absence of melanin changes more than color. The internal structure of the hair cortex shifts as the protein matrix that previously held pigment molecules becomes differently organized. Grey hair tends to be coarser in texture, more resistant to moisture penetration, and more prone to the wiry, frizzy behavior that people with grey hair commonly describe. The sebaceous glands that produce scalp oil also tend to decrease activity with age, which means grey hair receives less natural conditioning from the scalp than younger pigmented hair did.
The cuticle of grey hair is often more raised than that of pigmented hair, which contributes to frizz, light diffusion rather than reflection, and increased vulnerability to environmental damage. The same raised cuticle that makes grey hair look dull is also what makes it respond so visibly to good care: smooth it, moisturize it, and grey hair becomes reflective in a way that makes silver and white tones genuinely luminous.
Why Grey Hair Yellows and Dulls
One of the most common concerns about grey and white hair is discoloration: a yellowing or brassy cast that replaces the bright, cool tone most people want from their grey. This discoloration has several sources.
Mineral deposits from hard water accumulate on the hair shaft over time, particularly on the raised cuticle of grey hair where they have more surface to cling to. These minerals, primarily iron and copper, impart a yellow or orange cast that is more visible on grey hair than on pigmented hair where the underlying color masks it.
Product buildup from silicone-based conditioners and styling products also contributes to dullness and discoloration. Silicones coat the hair in a film that, over time, takes on a yellowish quality under light and obscures the natural brightness of the grey tone beneath.
Environmental factors including UV exposure and pollution deposit further residue on the strand, and the raised cuticle of grey hair absorbs these deposits more readily than a smoother, pigmented cuticle would.
New Wash Deep Clean for Grey Hair
New Wash (Deep Clean) is particularly valuable for grey and white hair precisely because it removes the accumulated mineral deposits, product residue, and environmental buildup that cause the yellowing and dullness grey hair is prone to. Used as a periodic reset, every two to three weeks or whenever discoloration or heaviness is noticeable, it clears the shaft of the residue obscuring the hair's natural tone without the sulfate stripping that would leave grey hair dry and frizzy.
For many grey-haired people, a regular Deep Clean wash is the most immediately visible improvement in their routine, because the brightness restored by removing accumulated deposits is dramatic on hair that was previously obscured by buildup.
New Wash (Rich) is the recommended formula for regular grey hair washing. The combination of coarser texture, reduced scalp oil production, and the structural dryness inherent to grey hair makes the fuller emollient profile of Rich the right daily formula for most grey hair types. It cleanses gently without stripping the limited natural oils present, and conditions the strand in a way that addresses the wiry, coarse texture that grey hair is prone to.
For grey hair that is finer in strand diameter despite its texture, or that tends toward scalp oiliness, New Wash (Original)provides a lighter alternative that still delivers meaningful conditioning without over-softening hair that needs some texture to hold its style.
A Note on Purple and Toning Shampoos
Purple and blue toning shampoos are widely used by people with grey and white hair to neutralize yellow tones. Many of these products contain sulfate surfactants that dry grey hair significantly, and their toning pigments can accumulate on the hair shaft, contributing over time to the dullness and discoloration they were intended to prevent. For grey hair that has benefited from toning shampoos, a periodic New Wash Deep Clean wash effectively removes that accumulated pigment alongside other buildup, restoring brightness.
Moisture and Softness: Hair Balm for Grey Hair
The wiry, coarse texture that characterizes much grey hair is primarily a moisture and cuticle-smoothing issue. Grey hair that is well-hydrated and has a smooth, flat cuticle does not behave wireily. It is supple, manageable, and responsive to styling in a way that unhydrated grey hair simply is not.
Hair Balm, applied to damp grey hair after rinsing New Wash Rich, addresses both the moisture deficit and the raised cuticle that cause grey hair's characteristic texture challenges. Left in as a leave-in treatment through the mid-lengths and ends, it softens the strand, reduces frizz and wiry behavior, and makes grey hair dramatically more manageable to style. Cool water rinsing before applying Hair Balm helps close the cuticle around the moisture delivered by New Wash, and Hair Balm then maintains that closed, smooth cuticle as the hair dries.
Shine: Grey Hair's Greatest Asset When Unlocked
Well-cared-for grey and white hair has a distinctive, luminous quality that no other hair color can replicate. The absence of pigment means that light passing through the strand is reflected differently, producing a brightness that is striking when the cuticle is smooth and the hair is genuinely moisturized. Dull grey hair and bright grey hair are the same hair in different states of care.
Hair Oil, applied in small amounts to dry grey hair after styling, is one of the most effective tools for unlocking grey hair's reflective potential. By smoothing the surface of the cuticle and adding a thin, light-refracting layer to the strand, Hair Oil converts dull grey into bright silver with a single application. The effect on well-maintained grey hair is more visually dramatic than on most pigmented hair types because the base is so reflective when unobstructed.
Texture and Styling
Grey hair often has natural texture and movement that, when worked with rather than against, produces distinctive and effortless styles. Undressed, applied to dry grey hair, enhances that natural texture and adds separation and body without the polymer-based films that coat the strand and suppress the grey hair's natural character over time. Primer, used before blow drying, protects against heat and smooths the cuticle during styling, making the blow-dry result both softer and more reflective.
A Grey Hair Routine with Hairstory
Wash regularly with New Wash Rich, allowing a full two-to-three minute dwell time before rinsing with cool water. Every two to three weeks, substitute New Wash Deep Clean to clear mineral deposits, product residue, and any toning shampoo accumulation before returning to Rich. Apply Hair Balm to damp mid-lengths and ends as a leave-in. Apply Primer before blow drying. Finish with Hair Oil on dry lengths for brightness and shine, or Undressed for texture and volume.
Grey hair's potential is rarely the issue. What it usually needs is to be cleaned of everything that is keeping it from showing.