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Here are some
tips on how to do your manicure and pedicure
professionally. It will surely save you time and
money.
Removing old lacquer:
Using a nail-polish and paper towel or cotton
pad both offer more friction than a tissue and
won’t shred the way cotton balls can. Always try
to use a non- acetone polish remover. It’s less
drying to nails and cuticles than regular
formulas.
File your nails while they’re dry:
You’ll get a better shape if you file before
soaking. Overly abrasive files, including
anything metal, will promote peeling so choose a
fine-grade emery board. The best technique, file
in one direction using smooth strokes. Sawing
back and forth can break the nail.
Soften nails and cuticles in a bowl of warm
water:
Mix the warm water with cuticle oil, olive oil
or body lotion. After 10 minutes of soaking, dry
off and apply cuticle cream or lotion. Gently
ease cuticles back by making tiny circles
against the cuticle with an orangewood stick- a
thin wooden stick with a slant-edge tip at both
ends that are sold n drugstores wrapped in
cotton.
Next, rub cuticles with a warm, damp, washcloth
in the same gentle way. The circular motion
helps slough away that white membrane, which is
dead cuticle skin. Many salons cut cuticles to
get a clean-looking result in little time, but
it’s not healthy practice: The cuticle forms a
protective seal between the nail and the skin to
prevent irritants from getting into the skin,
and cutting it can result in infection. You need
to coddle your cuticles. Avoid cutting them or
pushing back aggressively. Doing either can
damage the nail matrix, the area under the
cuticles where growth takes place.
Wash away oil or lotion:
Use soap and water and dry the nails thoroughly.
Rubbing them with polish remover again as they
do in salons shouldn’t be necessary and can
actually over-dry nails.
Apply a basecoat:
Basecoat is like a double-stick tape for your
nails. It holds polish in place so it lasts
longer. It also prevents dark lacquers from
tinting your nails.
Sweep on polish:
The way they do at salons, in three strokes,
from base to tip. Go up per dunk before applying
to nail. This helps you apply the thinnest coats
possible.
Wait two minutes between each coat of color:
Base and top coats are included to speed up
overall drying time. Set an egg timer.
Finish with a topcoat:
If you have the time, use a topcoat’s designed
to be shinny and protective. It will offer a
harder, longer-lasting protective shell with a
higher shine that fast- drying topcoat can
provide.
Wearing a topcoat also can keep your nails
healthy. It helps prevent water loss, so nail
breaks less. Still, if you’re in a rush, don’t
risks ruining your nails by all means go with
the speedy version. And use a quick-dry topcoat
every other day to prolong the life of your
polish.
Touch up any polish mistakes:
After nails are dry working on wet nails
guarantees smudging. Use a cotton swab and
polish remover or try a pen made specific
purposes. If you smudge, gently rub it out with
a dab of polish remover. When dry, polish only
affected area, then cover the entire nail
topcoat.
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Skin & Body
Also See:
Manicure Mania..... |