Gel Habits Die Hard: Quitting My Gel Manicure Habit - Makeup and Beauty Blog

gel nails, acrylics, nail polish
Baby's start gel: a candy apple red (right) and my sister's acrylics (left)

Last March, on a visit to see my sister, I asked if nosotros could get a manicure together. Now, she gets gel acrylics, and while I'd just gotten a manicure possibly twice in my whole life, something made me really want one that twenty-four hours.

"Certain," she responded, "I'1000 due for a fill up!"

This began my obsession with gel manicures, which has continued to this day. Unfortunately, a year is all information technology has taken to potentially ruin my nails.

When I was around xi, my mom was still getting acrylic nails. She loved going, and I loved how they looked. I also loved going with her and watching the whole process, seeing everything come off, and then watching the nail technician rebuild a perfect manicure right before my eyes. I felt the same sense of wonder when I started getting my own nails washed as an developed.

A few years into acrylics, nevertheless, my mom got a horrible fungal infection nether 1 nail, and she had to stop getting them altogether after that. That fact alone made me fear faux nails.

I got a regular manicure for a formal dance, acrylics for prom (which I promptly bit off a few days later) and, for some strange reason, decided that I needed gel acrylics in 2011. I got them filled twice earlier giving upwardly on them, though, and it took my nails weeks to recover.

I was working in retail and wanted to have dainty nails, only this was at the lawn and garden department of my local Walmart. It was hard to maintain them while I was literally playing effectually in the dirt.

My nails have always been sparse and accept a tendency to pare and crack. When they get even a little on the long side, they curve forward awkwardly, which leads me to believe I might be a victim of eggshell nails.

Over the past year, they've gotten better, every bit far as the peeling goes, due in part, I believe, to the fact that I quit smoking, started eating better, and I started taking collagen regularly. Nail problems can result from any number of things, like your nutrition (which, for me, despite my best attempts, isn't ever the best) or whatsoever medications you lot accept.

Nonetheless despite these bug, I've e'er loved doing my nails. As a kid, I had such an obsession with nail polish that I would paint my nails, simply then take the shine off the next day to pigment them a different color.

I can't say this was exactly good for my nails…but it was fun. As an adult, I've been pickier. I've learned how to brand my manicures last at least a calendar week with gel acme coats and by doing my best to preserve my difficult piece of work.

But the magic of real gel manicures hooked me. On my nails, they would often last almost a month, and it was worth the investment for something that wouldn't chip or flake the moment I got my hands wet. For a while, they even seemed to brand my nails stronger.

Some of my friends warned me confronting them and insisted that fifty-fifty though they were all the same my real nails, the gel process would cause bug (there are lots of arguments both for and against gel manicures).

It wasn't until a few weeks ago that I actually started seeing, and feeling, the repercussions of "the lamp."

For months, I went to the same salon, which was just a few blocks from my former apartment. I never had a problem until I decided to go a pedicure (my kickoff ever), forth with my regular manicure.

While I was getting my toes done, they soaked my erstwhile manicure in acetone to remove it. Pretty customary, but the acetone began burning my hands.

It didn't hurt that much, though, so I didn't say anything…but by the time the technician returned to my nails and got them nether the lamp, my cuticles, and the peel under my nails, were on fire. Still, I stayed quiet (why did I ever stay quiet?). Maybe my skin was just too sensitive?

At my side by side manicure, the skin nether my nails burned again, and my cuticles were extra dry afterward. I decided to switch salons, thinking that it would fix the problem, so I moved to a nicer identify a few blocks away.

The whole time I'd been getting gel manicures, my nails felt stronger and didn't break as hands, but at the new salon they used a dremel system to chip the old polish off after soaking. At present, afterward my many manicures, my nails are feeling gross and thin. They're as well outset to peel once again.

Then, I've decided to (attempt to) kick my manicure addiction and get back to exclusively doing my own nails. I hope it does them some proficient, in add-on to hopefully saving me a decent amount of money every calendar month.

gel-manicure-nails
And the last (hopefully)

I'm non sure exactly what I'm going to find when I soak this final manicure to remove information technology, or if, similar final fourth dimension, I'll lie to myself and go back to the salon and say, "Last one! Pinky promise."

Marcella Yakalis


Marcella Yakalis is a freelance author living and working in Brooklyn, New York, with two cats, 1 snake, and one very patient boyfriend. She writes about family, relationships, and oppressive retail culture. She tin too be found on Twitter and Instagram.

calhounwating.blogspot.com

Source: https://makeupandbeautyblog.com/just-for-fun/gel-habits-die-hard-quitting-gel-manicure-habit/

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