- Joined
- Dec 5, 2024
Yeah I don't do it often and I have shaky hands. Which isn't a good thing.It took practice to learn how to paint with my non-dominant hand. If you paint your nails often enough, you get used to it.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Yeah I don't do it often and I have shaky hands. Which isn't a good thing.It took practice to learn how to paint with my non-dominant hand. If you paint your nails often enough, you get used to it.
Get some sheer nude nailpolish. That way if you go over your nail it's not noticeable and you can either fix it before it dries, or after it dries after 4-5 hours you can just peel off the crusty nail polish off your cutcles.Yeah I don't do it often and I have shaky hands. Which isn't a good thing.
Let em chip, more practice in touch ups.I've been wanting to get a manipedi for a while, I just never really get to it. That and I'm afraid of chipping a nail by accident so I never really do my nails. I'm a living contradiction, help me!![]()
Dip a q-tip in nail varnish remover and then use it to clean the bits where you went outside the lines.Yeah I don't do it often and I have shaky hands. Which isn't a good thing.
Try ising nailoils on your cuticles. mine is super fragile unless i do this.I suspect that lifelong vegetarianism is why my nails are shitty and stupid. They flake, they peel, they're weak and flimsy. I'm a retard for stickers and my kids got me literally 700 fucking adorable seasonal nail stickers. Between the painting and the sticking and the drying, i dunno. I can't apply makeup either, which is doubly obnoxious as a fucking artist. Feminine shit just doesn't work out for me, and i refuse to whine like a faggot but
![]()
Let em chip, more practice in touch ups.![]()
I’m glad you asked because I was going to get into this.Hey, does anyone have any advice for how long I need to wait for nails to dry? I've started trying to do my nails, but I must be doing them wrong because I feel like they take forever to dry. Or, I'll think they're dry, start trying to do stuff but they get messed up because they weren't actually completely dry yet... I've tried both regular nail polish and quick dry - quick dry was a little better but again, I messed that up as well.
Am I not waiting long enough between coats (someone said to wait 5 minutes between coats)? Am I actually doing too many coats and so it never dries? It's annoying because I feel like I have them looking nice, but then ruin them by not being patient. Thanks in advance to anyone who has any advice.
This is such helpful advice, thank you so much!I’m glad you asked because I was going to get into this.
It can seem almost counterintuitive but to those of you new to doing your own nails, you may benefit from just going all in, getting a gel kit (the OPI kit is like $60) and starting there. Traditional nail polish is a different beast from gel polish, I am learning, and I wish I hadn’t gotten so used to regular enamel because I’m having to unlearn things.
The main reason I suggest the gel kit to noobs is that you can go one hand at a time, and the hand you do can be completely cured (aka dry) before you work on your dominant hand. Wet gel won’t stick to the cured nails the way wet enamel will stick to a dry or drying nail and ruin everything.
And to actually answer the question, it takes about an hour before you can, say, go to bed, but the nails won’t truly be dry for 24 hours. And yes you should do thin coats.
eta one more thing: when wondering how dry your nails are, gently touch the nail to the tip of your tongue. How much you can taste it will tell you how far along you are. You can’t taste it when it’s dry.
If you want to use air dry lacquers, Seche Vite is THE quick dry top coat. I can use it over tacky color layers and it will smooth and dry to a glossy shine in 2-3 minutes. And not the false dry where you tap a key or poke something and the tip smudges, but I can go do the dishes by hand and still have a fresh pristine mani after kinda dry. It's thick, self leveling, and works wonders on smoothing out the lumps and bumps of heavy/chunky glitter toppers or minor texture in solid colors.Hey, does anyone have any advice for how long I need to wait for nails to dry? I've started trying to do my nails, but I must be doing them wrong because I feel like they take forever to dry. Or, I'll think they're dry, start trying to do stuff but they get messed up because they weren't actually completely dry yet... I've tried both regular nail polish and quick dry - quick dry was a little better but again, I messed that up as well.
Am I not waiting long enough between coats (someone said to wait 5 minutes between coats)? Am I actually doing too many coats and so it never dries? It's annoying because I feel like I have them looking nice, but then ruin them by not being patient. Thanks in advance to anyone who has any advice.
I'm not opposed to learning to do gel, but I guess I've always heard that it can be rough on the nails and you have to be careful about not getting it on your skin
I haven't tried them but Blank Beauty's are $9Anyone have any recommendations for "jelly" (sheer) nail polishes that are under 10 bucks? Not interested in gel, just regular nail polish.
I have some magnetic topper polishes that are cool, but I don't like how they look as just toppers; I feel like I need to do a coat of sheer color over the magnetic effect to get the look I want.
I know some popular polish brands are releasing some colorful sheer polishes, but they are so damn expensive for what they are, so if people can recommend some cheapies, that would be great! Haha.
What the hell? Don't ingest that. If you're doing only one hand at that moment, use a non-painted nail (not the tip, but the nail itself) to lightly tap the polished one. If you feel resistance or leave a mark, it's not dry. Otherwise, either wait it out or lightly touch it with the pad of your fingertip. Keep in mind it could still be surface dry, but not fully dry. If you suspect that is the case, either add a tiny bit more pressure to check for a fingerprint, or wait a little bit longer before adding another polish layer.eta one more thing: when wondering how dry your nails are, gently touch the nail to the tip of your tongue. How much you can taste it will tell you how far along you are. You can’t taste it when it’s dry.
Thanks! Noted.I haven't tried them but Blank Beauty's are $9