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Neutralization wheel for color professionals

Tap the unwanted tone and discover the corrector you need. Based on Oswald Star color theory.

Tap a tone Red Orange Yellow Green Blue Violet

Tap a color on the wheel to see what corrector you need

How to use the neutralization wheel

1

Identify the unwanted tone

Look at your client's hair. That orange after bleaching, that yellow that won't go away, that red peeking through the ends. Identify the dominant reflect.

2

Tap the color on the wheel

Press the unwanted tone segment. The wheel will automatically show you the complementary color that neutralizes it.

3

Apply the recommended corrector

Add the corrector reflect to your color formula. Follow the intensity guidance we provide for a balanced result.

The Oswald Star and hair neutralization

Hair color neutralization is one of the fundamental skills of every color professional. When bleaching, when applying color over a base with history, when sun or water change the client's reflects, unwanted tones appear.

The solution lies in the Oswald Star: a color theory model that organizes primary and secondary tones into opposite pairs. Each pair cancels the other out. If you have an unwanted orange, you apply its opposite (blue). If you have a yellow that won't go away, you neutralize it with violet.

Neutralization table

Unwanted tone Corrector Reflect number
RedGreen (ash-matte).13 / .31
OrangeBlue (ash).1 / .01
YellowViolet (iridescent).2
GreenRed (copper).4
BlueOrange (copper-gold).43 / .34
VioletYellow (gold).3

When you need to neutralize

The most common situations where neutralization is key:

  • After bleaching: The underlying pigment always leaves warm tones (orange, yellow). A good ash or iridescent corrector eliminates them.
  • Resistant grays: Gray hair can reveal unwanted reflects, especially in light formulas.
  • Over previously colored hair: Color history can produce unexpected reflects when applying a new shade.
  • Sun and water damage: Sun exposure oxidizes pigments and creates coppery or orange tones.

If you want to dive deeper into color theory applied to hair, check out our colorimetry basics guide. And for specific neutralization techniques, read our article on how to neutralize unwanted tones.

For complex cases like color correction after a disaster, see our professional color correction guide.

If you're looking for a specific toner to neutralize orange or yellow in blondes, try our toner selector: it recommends the exact family based on level and unwanted tone. You can also check the underlying pigment for each level in our hair color level chart.

We answer your questions

Questions about the neutralization wheel

Everything you need to know about hair neutralization

The wheel is based on the Oswald Star, which organizes colors into complementary pairs. Each unwanted tone is neutralized with the opposite color on the wheel. Tap the tone you want to eliminate and we'll show you the exact corrector you need.
The Oswald Star is a color organization model that divides the spectrum into six main tones. Opposite colors neutralize each other: red-green, orange-blue, yellow-violet. It's the theoretical basis for all hair color correction.
It depends on the intensity of the unwanted tone. As a rule of thumb: 1-2 cm for mild reflects, 3-4 cm for moderate reflects, and up to one-third of the mix for very intense reflects. The wheel gives you guidance for each case.
Yes. Neutralization principles are universal and apply to all professional brands. What changes is the reflect numbering (for example, .1 means ash in some brands and blue in others). Always check your brand's color chart.
The wheel tells you what type of corrector to use. Blendsor goes much further: it analyzes 70+ hair variables for each client and generates the complete, personalized formula with the exact products from any brand, in 15 seconds. Try it free.

The wheel tells you what corrector to use.
Blendsor gives you the exact formula.

With any products, for each client, in 15 seconds. Free.

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