How To Achieve The Perfect Manicure Hot Models Indonesian For Strong Beautiful Nails
By: AlexxpuNkreaNk grEzIkraYa, writers the content "Hot Indonesia Of Perfect Manicure" for you. at : 03:44 - 11/06/2012
If you pride yourself on your natural nails, then this is the perfect manicure hot models Indonesian for you; in fact, it's probably what you should indulge yourself in at least once a week to keep your nails strong and beautiful.
Even if you keep your nails at a shorter, more active length and especially if you use artificials, this process will help keep your natural nails and beds strong and healthy.
Now, you can go to a salon every week or two for a basic manicure and a fresh coat of polish, and that's fun to do if you have the time and money.But some beginning home manicurists really need to learn the basic steps to proper care and health of their nails so they're properly prepped for applying whatever art designs they've decided to try.
So these are the beauty supplies you should have on hand for your home manicure and the steps to follow to get your nails ready for your polishes and art. All of these supplies can be purchased at your local department store and possibly even "dollar stores" in your area for the most savings.- A bowl of warm water with some mild liquid soap: opens the pores and loosens cuticles
- Cotton balls or cotton pads: use with polish remover to remove old polish
- Nail polish remover (non-acetone for artificials): Removes old polish and removes cuticle oils after the manicure
- Fresh dry towel: to pat dry your hands after soaking
- Orange stick: cleaning under the nails and removing overgrown cuticles
- Nail clippers: cutting nails down if needed; safer and better trim than scissors
- Emery boards or files: trimming and shaping
- Nail buffers: removing surface ridges
- Nail polish base coat and top coat: the final touches
And here's what you do for a salon perfect manicure at home:
- Use the cotton balls or pads to remove your polish then clean your nails. If you're taking your time and having nothing else planned but your manicure, you can leave your hands soaking in the soapy water for a few minutes after you remove the polish.
- Use cuticle oil around the cuticles to help soften them after soaking them. This also helps loosen the cuticles to push them back.
- Clean underneath your nails and around the cuticles with the orange stick. Use the orange stick push the cuticles back.
- Clip and shape your nails. You may not need to clip them if you are in fact letting them grow longer. But sometimes wear on the ends depending on what you're doing with them and need to be reshaped. If you're using artificials and need to keep your natural nails clipped short, be sure to file them a little to make them smooth around the edges.
- Be sure to only file your natural nails in one direction at a time, starting from the sides and moving to the middle. This one-way motion will keep them from splitting.
- Buff the top of your nails with the buffer. If you have any ridges in the nail bed, you can buff them smooth so your polish and any art looks smooth. Polishes will go on much nicer if there aren't any surface ridges.
- Remove any excess cuticle oil or creams with non-acetone polish remover to get ready for polishing. If you're not planning on using a color polish or doing any art designs, you can apply one or two coats of a clear base or top coat and you're done. Otherwise, apply one to two coats of base coat and then move on to whatever nail art technique you have planned for the day.
Karen Musselman blogs about nail art accessories and designs on her site Beginner's Nail Art - All Nail Art, All In One Place, offering tips, tutorials and nail art videos for the beginner nail artist. Stop by for the latest nail art tutorials and how to give your nails a salon perfect manicure without going to a salon.
Nail School - Day 5 - Summary of Week One
By: AlexxpuNkreaNk grEzIkraYa, writers the content "Hot Indonesia Of Perfect Manicure" for you. at : 03:50 - 11/06/2012
Yesterday was my fifth day of nail school and I'm happy to say that I've completed 1 out of 8 weeks. On Friday the only notable thing that happened was that the waxing students practiced on my legs, so now my legs are silky smooth from being waxed! Which is much better than the ultra hairy-ness that always seems to happen in winter. They were pretty good! At least, I think... I never had my legs waxed before.Here are my overall thoughts on the first week. I think that this program is really inefficient and I'm disappointed that it is so easy. I knew that signing up for this would be completely different from my university experiences, but I really didn't anticipate it being this bad. I use the word bad for a lack of a better word, but I want to be clear that I don't think nail school is "bad," I'm just surprised at how it is run. I'm a firm believer that the harder school is, the more you learn, so I'm concerned (at this point) that I won't learn everything I need to know by the time I graduate. And I'm not saying that I won't pass the mandatory state exams by the time I graduate, I'm saying that I think I won't be as skilled as I hoped this program would make me. I'm starting off pretty much from zero, I have no idea how to file my nails, I am still not totally sure what a cuticle is, and I kind of stink at polishing my nails (yes, the actual POLISHING). Also, can anyone tell me what the heck the difference between a squoval and a round nail are? They look exactly the same to me! How can I possibly learn all of that by the time this program is over when I feel like I wasted the first week.
After attending this first week, I've decided to make a list of goals that I want to achieve by the end of the program. Let me know if you can think of other things that I have forgotten/
1. First and foremost, I want to get my nail technician license. This is really the only reason I'm taking the class to being with. I want to be able to practice nail art on others as a (sort of) career.
2. I want to be able to shape and file nails so that they are all the same length and shape. This has always been really hard for me. I depend too much on the nail bed and not enough on the length of the entire nail. I also really stink at filing. Once I tried to make my nails square and they were all sorts of crooked and crazy looking.
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