
Korean artiste DJ Soda shares hair loss nightmare after bleaching mishap
The popular deejay has taken to Instagram to urge fans to seek out skilled professionals when bleaching hair after her recent experience. Photos: DJ Soda/Instagram
South Korean artiste DJ Soda has revealed a distressing hair ordeal following her most recent dyeing session, taking to Instagram last week to share about it.
In a post written in both Korean and English, she began by stating, 'Hair salon ruined my hair,' before elaborating on the incident.
According to DJ Soda, she had decided to bleach her hair blonde again to surprise fans after completing her tour and taking a three-year break from colouring.
'I got my hair bleached at my usual salon. My hair was originally thick, full and in healthy condition from taking a three-year break from bleaching and consistent care,' she explained.
However, the session went terribly wrong.
'They left the bleach on for too long, and my hair melted from the roots. In the end, I had to shave the entire back and sides of my head.'
She also revealed the emotional toll it took on her.
'I was so upset that I couldn't sleep for two weeks and cried almost every day.
'It's really hard for me to look in the mirror. When I see videos fans took of me, I feel even more heartbroken.'
Known for her upbeat personality and vibrant performances, the 37-year-old said her road to recovery will be long.
'It will take at least two years for my hair to fully recover,' she added.
DJ Soda also urged her fans to be cautious.
'Don't end up like me – bleaching really depends on the hairstylist's skill,' she warned.
'Please seek specialists and do thorough research beforehand.'
The situation took another turn when she posted an update a day later, claiming the salon had reached out – not to apologise, but to request that she take down her post.
'They contacted me asking to delete my post and offered me money and a settlement agreement,' she wrote in Korean.
Rejecting the offer, DJ Soda added: 'Even if I were offered billions, it would not undo the damage to my appearance or the pain I'm currently enduring.
'I have given them ample opportunity to resolve the issue.'
She further alleged that she received no apology or contact for three weeks following the incident.
"All I ever wanted was for them to honestly admit their mistake and offer a genuine apology."
In sharing her experience publicly, she said her intention was to prevent others from going through the same trauma. View this post on Instagram
A post shared by DJ SODA OFFICIAL(@deejaysoda)

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Star
an hour ago
- The Star
TVB actor Moses Chan says wife Aimee Chan manages his finances: 'She's the boss'
Hong Kong actor Moses Chan and his wife Aimee Chan, who tied the knot in 2013, share three children. Photo: Aimee Chan/Instagram Hong Kong actor Moses Chan is no stranger to success in the Asian film industry. With a reported annual income of HK$30mil (RM16.2mil), the 54-year-old holds the title of highest-paid artiste at Hong Kong broadcaster, TVB. But rather than managing that fortune on his own, Chan entrusts them to his wife, Hong Kong-based Canadian actress Aimee Chan. Speaking at a recent banking event alongside former TVB star Natalie Tong, Moses shared that Aimee, 44, takes charge of their household expenses. 'I handle matters outside the home while Aimee looks after the kids. She's great at managing everything, so I leave the household finances to her. When it comes to business and signing contracts, that's where I step in,' he said. When Tong, 44, asked whether he had handed over financial control from the moment they married in 2013, Moses smiled and responded: 'I already belong to her. She's the boss!' The award-winning actor added that both parties are transparent about where their money goes. 'Aimee has her own money, but mine is shared. I don't have personal savings. As a man, I believe in taking responsibility for the future of my family. That's what being a real man is about,' he said. Moses and Aimee, who share three children, recently celebrated their 12th wedding anniversary. On June 21, Aimee shared two photos on Instagram – one showing Moses smiling happily as he snapped a picture of her and another capturing the couple holding hands. Moses once said in an interview that being mindful is key to a lasting marriage. 'We have never said hurtful things to each other… That's why our relationship is still full of love!'


The Star
an hour ago
- The Star
'Criminally hot': Celebrities can't get enough of the bandage dress comeback
It was, well, bound to happen. Some 15 years after its last renaissance, the bandage dress, that item of clothing invented in the mid-1980s that makes the wearer look as if she has been sucked into a tube, shrink-wrapped and excreted back into the world, is once again resurgent – just as it is every time the twin forces of body culture and economic gloom combine. And with it comes the debate about whether the dress is ultimately about objectification or self-empowerment. The trend returned in earnest last September, when Kaia Gerber wore a white bandage dress recreated by Herve Leger to mimic the white bandage dress worn by her mother, Cindy Crawford, to the Oscars in 1993 with Richard Gere. In January, influencer Olivia Boblet posted a TikTok showing herself in a Herve Leger bandage dress, which now has 1.7 million views and more than 1,000 comments (most of them essentially reading 'finally!'). Then, in April, Hailey Bieber wore a Saint Laurent bandage dress to the Fashion Trust US awards, doubling down on the style in early June with a vintage Herve Leger number. 'Criminally hot,' Kim Russell, aka the Kimbino, wrote when she reposted a picture of Bieber on Instagram in the vintage look. Bieber responded, 'Herve bandage dresses are back I fear.' Hailey Bieber attends the Fashion Trust US Awards wearing a bandage dress. via AFP Read more: Fashion collections bring back iconic designs, proving nostalgia sells Part of this reemergence is down to the House of CB, a British brand that made its name by introducing the bandage dress to a new generation in 2010, and reintroduced it as part of its birthday celebrations last month. Part of it has to do with Herve Leger itself. The brand that popularised the look will celebrate its 40th anniversary in September and has gleefully embraced the bandage resurgence. 'So much of the new generation that's discovering the brand for the first time wants to get dressed up, yearns for connection and going out,' said Michelle Ochs, the Herve Leger creative director. And the bandage dress, which was first the supermodel dress and then the "it-girl dress", is also the ultimate clubbing dress. 'It's aspirational,' said Law Roach, the 'image architect' who is such a fan of the style he had his own collaboration with the house of Herve Leger a few years ago featuring (yes) bandage dresses. But as much as the return of the bandage dress is being framed in the language of fun or nostalgia, it is also all wrapped up in the Ozempic-inspired rise of a new form of body consciousness and diet culture. Not to mention a political climate in which cartoonish versions of femininity are the preferred paradigm. It is a way of dressing backward, at a time when it can seem as if society itself is going backward. Though often attributed to the Herve Leger label, the bandage dress was actually invented by Azzedine Alaia, who showed his first bandage dresses on the runway in the early 1980s as a riposte to the more exaggerated power dressing that was in vogue at the time. Unlike the battering ram shoulders and besuited armour of Thierry Mugler, Alaia's dress, which was inspired by Egyptian mummies, offered a different kind of physical assertion, one that celebrated the female figure while also protecting it. It was such a pivot that, in 1985, not long after the first bandage dresses were shown, Alaia was chosen as the 'creator of the year' at the Oscar De La Mode awards in France (a short-lived event created by Jack Lang, then the country's culture minister). He accepted his award with his date, Grace Jones, who wore a fuchsia version of the bandage dress. The New York Times christened it 'the sexy mummy look', which wasn't only about ancient funeral rites. The Herve Leger version was introduced in the early 1990s. While Alaia's bandage dresses, which were knit from a stretchy viscose, were relatively soft – they moulded the body and wrapped it, rather than constricting it – the Herve Leger version 'really did feel like an Ace bandage', Crawford said. For all that it celebrated the female form, the dress also moulded and constrained it – sometimes, Crawford acknowledged, pretty painfully. Nevertheless, she said, 'the models all gravitated to it'. Read more: Dungarees are back in style – here's how to wear them like a fashion pro Linda Evangelista, Iman, Naomi Campbell – they all wore bandage dresses. 'It was a chic way to show your body, but not trashy,' Crawford said. Aerobics was on the rise at the time, and the dress was a way to show the hard work that went into your body. And it was a way to differentiate your body from the bodies that couldn't get into the bandage dress. It may be worth noting that this time around, despite all the social media enthusiasm and the fact that, according to Katy Lubin, a spokesperson for the fashion search engine Lyst, the House of CB sold 15,000 units the first day of its bandage revival in May, actual data suggests that the dresses are not being consumed at the level they are being celebrated. 'Overall volume is still pretty low, although we have seen demand increase by 2% in the last three months,' Lubin said. 'Bandage dresses generate strong reactions, and content creators understand that divisive stories drive comments, shares and algorithmic reach in ways that universally beloved items simply don't.' In other words, when it comes to the bandage dress, it is possible, she said, that 'the controversy itself is the commodity'. – ©2025 The New York Times Company This article originally appeared in The New York Times.


The Star
an hour ago
- The Star
Cowboy, but make it fashion: Beyonce's tour looks blend country and couture
The singer's Cowboy Carter Tour looks balance between avant-garde and high fashion. Photo: Instagram/Schiaparelli Beyonce has done it again. Her Cowboy Carter Tour is a feast for the eyes, with costumes that redefine country glam. From rhinestone-studded Western wear to high-fashion fringe and custom couture, each performance is a visual spectacle. Her wardrobe proves, once again, her unmatched ability to turn the stage into a runway. The creations are nothing short of elaborate too. Ralph Lauren, for example, crafted a look handmade in Italy by five specialised artisans. 'The full-length silhouette is embellished with 19,000 tonal Swarovski crystals, embroidered chains and crystalline fringe pieces that took more than 25 hours to complete,' the label revealed on Instagram. Loewe described its contribution as a 'futuristic, cowboy- infused ensemble'. A cowboy outfit can be much more than the usual denim. Photo: Instagram/Loewe According to the statement released, Beyonce wore the Jacron Draped Trousers and a shirt inspired by the silhouette of a traditional denim jacket, emblazoned with gold and silver foil. Read more: Music you can 'see'? Rhythm and beats are now visible through fashion The look was completed with crystal-adorned opera gloves, slouchy boots entirely covered in crystals, and a trompe l'oeil- printed bodysuit featuring custom flame and star artwork. Her couture Schiaparelli ensemble had a mesh corset decorated with satin, paired with black velvet bootcut pants and a dramatic black feather stole. Other notable brands that have dressed Beyonce so far include Burberry, Dolce & Gabbana, Off-White, Coperni, Mugler, Roberto Cavalli, Diesel, Moschino and Dsquared2. The Cowboy Carter Tour kicked off on April 28 and runs through July 28, with stops across cities in the US and Europe. A true fashion icon That said, Beyonce has always been a fashion icon. Whatever she wears – on stage or off – quickly becomes a pop culture moment, setting trends and dominating headlines. She even has her own fashion label, Ivy Park, offering sportswear designed for modern lifestyle. Her Renaissance World Tour in 2023 was a fashion spectacle in its own right (she wore around 148 different looks), with major luxury labels lining up to dress her in custom creations for each stop. In 2016, Beyonce was honoured with the 'Fashion Icon Award' by the Council of Fashion Designers of America (CFDA). Her impact on fashion extended to the screen as well. The 2020 visual album Black Is King – which she co-wrote, produced, directed and starred in – featured more than 60 outfits. Even a two-minute teaser for her 2022 song I'm That Girl showcased over a dozen ensembles. Burberry created a head-turning coat with an eagle emblazoned on the back. Photo: Instagram/Beyonce The country western roots are evident, but dressed up with glittering embellishments. Photo: Instagram/Dolce & Gabbana Read more: Was Bob Mackie misunderstood? The fashion designer has dressed icons like Cher When designer Diane Von Furstenberg took to the stage to introduce Beyonce for the CFDA award, she said that 'the image of a woman being in charge has never looked more glamorous and more desirable'. 'She is everything all women want to be and after listening to her, no woman should ever feel belittled or insecure again. Talent, heart, strength and courage,' Von Furstenberg noted. 'That is what true style is about and all of that is what Beyonce is the best example of.' In her acceptance speech, Beyonce reflected on the deeper meaning of fashion in her life. 'It's a tool for finding your own identity, expression and strength. It transcends style and is a time capsule of our greatest milestones,' she said.