Four Hair Collections Celebrating Spring Colors

Spring is a blank canvas that fills up with color. Strokes of light, bursts of creative brilliance, displays of personal expression with renewed energy.

It is the artists' favorite season, because of the chromatic palette it gifts us: rich, varied and surprising.

Pinks, violets, and reds from the flowers that are in season; greens that clothe forests, gardens and parks; vibrant yellows and oranges, like the sun that is increasing in time and intensity. Blues, from the sea and the rain.

All these shades blend in ways as beautiful as they are chaotic, inspiring us, forming rainbows, and offering us the opportunity to express our identity without rules or limits. Showing us the world in full color.

Manuel Mon

Amazonia Collection

Hair: Manuel Mon @manuelmonoficial

Photography: Bernardo Baragaño @vertigoestudio

MUA: María Montes @__mariamontes__

Styling: Ana González

Model: Taire Garcia

Video: Gonzalo Iglesias

Products: Revlon Professional @revlonprofessional_es

The Amazon inspires this collection, with its rich biodiversity and the amazing color contrasts that can only emerge from the purest and wildest nature. The hair spreads out like the beautiful wings of the birds that live among its trees, showing a perfect balance between the fragility of their feathers and a fervent desire for freedom, expressed through vibrant shades of reds, blues and fluorescent greens. The combination of avant-garde shapes and textures results in unique and fascinating creations.

Javier Gomar

Balloon Collection

Balloon @Javier Gomar
(Photography: David Arnal)

Hair: Javier Gomar/ Divergent Hairstylist @javiergomar4

Hair Assistant: Laia Alborch @laia.alborch

Photography: David Arnal @davidarnalteam

MUA: Anna González @annagonzalezbeauty

Styling & Design: Mikoto @mikotovill

Models: Francis Ochoa @iamfrancisperezz, Tyler Middless @tylermiddlesmiss, Victoria Roig @vicoland

Video making of: Isa Monsalve @monsalve_films

Who has not ever caught a balloon? Playing with them, we see how depending on the pressure we exert, we can highlight and change their shape completely. You can see how there are different types that we can mold under our criteria and imagination, but could we get the hair to adapt as if it were a balloon? The idea of this collection, Balloon Collection, is based on investigating whether it is possible to dry the hair in a way that makes it completely opaque, while maintaining the volume and brilliance of the color. Once the previous point had been developed, Javier Gomar discovered a way to change its shape with his fingers as if he were holding a balloon of hair in his hands. For this reason, in this collection he has looked for geometries with the different cutting styles made with the aim of being able to mold them with ease. In addition, it is visible how, depending on the pressure exerted at all times, it is possible to highlight the areas, creating different blocks, more polished or different volumes on the same plane.

Do you want to play with balloons again? Enter Balloon Collection and bring out the most creative side of your childhood. To carry out this amazing project, he has followed the commercial vanguard as a vehicle style. In other words, an evolution of hair that, from an avant-garde starting point, achieves its more commercial version that Javier Gomar likes so much.

Another of the great achievements of this collection at a technical level is that it has been worked entirely with complete pieces—without false pieces added later. To do this, the hairdresser has investigated the way that would allow him to make hair being pressed to a certain point, creating plane jumps. In the process of creating these spectacular images, the use of different tools and techniques was necessary, although in the end it was the work with the hands that allowed visualization to be achieved. As for the coloration, the color transition has been sought in a slightly more transgressive version than that of such cold colors. The background has been designed entirely in plastic with the idea of showing a changing environment that is far from the 100percent white backgrounds of past collections.

Hairkrone

Diversity Collection

DIVERSITY @HAIRKRONE
(Photography: David Arnal)

Hair: HAIRKRONE @hairkrone

Hair Assistant: HAIRKRONE ACADEMY @hairkroneacademy

Photography: David Arnal @davidarnalteam

MUA: Hairkrone Academy @hairkroneacademy

Styling: Visori Fashionart @visorifashionartstudio

Products: Alfaparf Milano Professional Spain @alfaparfmilanopro_spain

Video: Nito Solsona

Hairkrone presents its Diversity collection, inspired by the aesthetics derived from the K-POP musical style, the popular music of South Korea, so present today, which fuses pop, electronica and new wave, among other styles. An aesthetic without distinction of gender, where bleached skins and dyes in fantasy tones prevail, and the explosion of color and the overlapping of accessories make us think of a crazy Korean rococo. Haircuts inspired by the figures who succumb to this fashion, the "KPOP Idols", South Korean singers and dancers who attract the attention of thousands of fans. Cuts that sacrifice the mane to play with higher volumes, with superimposed layers and hair shaved at the lower area to generate a depth effect.

Imanol Oliver and Oliver Estilismo

Shibuya Collection

SHIBUYA @Oliver Estilismo
(Photography: David Arnal)

Hair: Imanol Oliver @imanol_oliver

Hair Instagram: Oliver Estilismo @oliverestilismo

Hair Assistant: Maria Mar Mercader @mercaderubeda

Photography: David Arnal @davidarnalteam

Retouche: David Arnal @davidarnalteam

MUA: José Méndez@makeupbyjose_mdz

Styling: Mikoto @mikotovill

Models: Lidia Martínez @lis.sten /Susana Martínez @susanamarlo/Isabel Sáez@isabel_saez66

Products: Montibello Hair @montibellohair_es

Oliver Estilismo present their Shibuya collection, a tribute to the busiest pedestrian crossing in the world. A point of reference for the world and especially for young people, Shibuya (Tokyo, Japan) is a hub of commerce, fashion and styling, famous for having spawned the Kogai subculture. Oliver is committed to reflecting the rising Asian trend, from the invasion of sushi in the West, through Japanese TV series, the rise of manga and hentai, to Rosalia's chicken teriyaki. Shibuya breathes street and cosmopolitan Tokyo, disinhibition in the world of clothing and the way it is shown in the streets. Precise haircuts to obtain straight and asymmetrical shapes, pastel colors, faded and degraded.