Not every brunette wants to stay pure brunette — and not every brunette wants to go fully blonde.
There’s a sweet spot in between: bronde balayage. Brown at the base, blonde through the mid-lengths and ends, with cool, dimensional ribbons of light woven through in a way that catches every movement. It’s arguably the most requested brunette transformation in the salon right now, and for good reason — it’s flattering, low-maintenance, and endlessly versatile.
If you’ve been sitting in the “not sure how light I want to go” camp, this post is for you.
What Is Bronde Balayage?
Bronde balayage is a freehand colour technique that lives — as the name suggests — between brunette and blonde. Your colourist hand-paints lightener through the mid-lengths and ends, leaving a natural, rooted brunette base and building cool-toned, dimensional lightness through the rest of the hair.
The result is hair that reads brunette from the crown and blonde from the mid-shaft down, with the two tones blending seamlessly through the middle. No harsh line, no dramatic grow-out, no sitting in foils for half a day.
It’s the same core balayage technique we use across every dimensional service in the salon — freehand painting, no foils at the root, no harsh lines — but calibrated to land in that perfect brunette-to-blonde middle ground.
Who Is Bronde Balayage For?
Bronde balayage is ideal for:
- Brunettes who want real lightness without fully committing to blonde. If you’ve wanted to see yourself lighter but a full blonde feels like too much, bronde delivers brightness and brightness around the face while keeping your base grounded.
- Anyone drawn to cool, ashy tones. Bronde sits in a cool-to-neutral tonal family — think soft beige, ash, mushroom, and champagne through the ends. If warm caramel isn’t your thing, this is the direction.
- Women who want lived-in, low-maintenance colour. Because the root stays your natural brunette, the grow-out is incredibly soft. There’s no obvious regrowth line, no six-week panic — most clients come in every four to five months for a refresh.
- Clients who want dimension, not a solid blonde. Bronde is all about contrast and movement. The ribbons of lighter colour through darker tones are what make the hair look alive, especially when it’s styled into waves or a blowout.
How Is Bronde Different From Full Blonde Balayage?
The technique is the same. The finish line is different.
A full blonde balayage pushes the ends as light as possible, often with minimal contrast between root and tip. A bronde balayage intentionally preserves the depth at the root and through the back, leaving more of your natural brunette visible in the finished look. The contrast between base and ends is the point — that’s what creates the dimension.
Bronde also tends to lean cooler in tone. Where a warm balayage is built around caramel, honey, and toffee, a bronde is built around beige, mushroom, and soft ash. It’s a more refined, less sun-kissed feel.
If you’re weighing your options, our post on highlights vs. balayage breaks down the technique differences in more detail.
The Process at Matthew Jonathan Salon
Every bronde balayage starts with a consultation. We look at your natural base, your hair’s texture and density, your skin tone, and what you’re hoping to achieve. Bronde covers a wide range — from a soft, subtle lift just through the ends to a much more pronounced brunette-to-blonde melt — so the consultation is where we land on exactly where on that spectrum your colour should sit.
From there, your colourist hand-paints the lightener freehand, working through the mid-lengths and ends in sweeping motions. We work section by section, placing lightness where it will catch the most natural movement, and layering carefully to build the depth and dimension that makes bronde look the way it does.
Depending on your hair’s length and density, the full appointment typically runs two to three hours. We don’t rush it — the quality of the result depends entirely on the care taken during application.
We finish with a toner dialled into your specific cool tone (soft ash, mushroom, beige — whatever suits you best), a bond treatment to protect the integrity of the hair, and a blowout so you see the full result before you leave.
See It in Action
This is a recent bronde balayage created by our stylist Guine — a natural brunette base melting into cool, dimensional ribbons of light through the mid-lengths and ends, finished with a glossy blowout. It’s one of our favourite recent results, and a perfect example of what bronde balayage can look like when it’s done well.
View this post on Instagram
The dimension, the movement, the way the light plays through the waves — that’s what we’re going for every time.
How Often Do You Need to Maintain It?
One of the best things about bronde balayage is the maintenance schedule. Because the technique is designed to grow out naturally, most clients come in every four to five months for a refresh — whether that’s a toner refresh to keep the ends cool, a gloss treatment to boost shine, or a touch-up to the painted sections.
You’re not locked into six-week cycles the way you might be with traditional highlights. Your colour works with your natural growth, not against it.
Ready for Your Bronde Balayage?
We’d love to make this yours.
Matthew Jonathan Salon has been Oakville’s destination for precision colour since 2014, with 800+ five-star Google reviews and multiple Top Choice Award wins. Our colourists specialize in exactly this kind of work — dimensional, lived-in, cool-toned colour that looks beautiful and feels like you.
Book your appointment through the link below. New clients are always welcome, and spots fill quickly.
📍 Matthew Jonathan Salon — 65 Lakeshore Rd. West, Oakville, ON
Curious about what balayage costs and why? Read our full breakdown here: Why Is Balayage So Expensive?



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