100% agreed, excellent post Karen.

I like UV mani/pedi too, that's great... gonna steal it!
On Oct 5, 2010 3:24 PM, "Karen" <[email protected]> wrote:
> I have not been keeping up with every post on this, so if I'm repeating,
then
> sorry....but I have noted a few posts from folks saying they were afraid
to
> commit to yet another expensive nail system without being sure it's the
thing to
> do.
>
> I am here to tell you...get thee UV polishes ASAP!
>
> Here are some thoughts I've been having and want to share:
>
> I registered with the CND website and I get probably one call a week...not
only
> from local people, but folks who are travelling here and want to be sure
> there'll be someone who can take care of them. Just today, a lady from
Nashville
> who's going to be here 3 weeks, wanted to be sure I could do the "Shellac
nails"
> before she put them on at home.
>
>
> When they call, I don't try to over-educate them on the phone, but I do
assure
> them that I do indeed do the "Shellac" or the "Axxium" nails they've seen
> advertised. I call them UV polishes, and the service a UV Manicure or UV
> Pedicure.
>
>
> I find the following to be true of the four (4) brands I currently carry:
>
> - The polish-bottle types seem to be more like polish...richer in pigment,
so
> thinner is better. A little picky-er to get perfect, but gorgeous color.
They
> seem to soak off a little quicker, which is good, because they file with a

> sanding band more like polish buffs...you know how it feels to buff polish
off
> with a sanding band? the bit sort of scuffs for a bit until it grabs hold?
>
> - The in-a-pot types seem more like gel...thicker and more of a presence
on the
> nail. Building color might need 3 thin, thin layers. They take longer to
remove,
> perhaps because there's just more product on the nail, but they buff with
a
> sanding band beautifully. I find myself doing "fills" rather than soaking
them
> off sometimes.
>
>
> - All of them soak of better if I've lightly buffed off the clear coat
before
> wrapping them in acetone wraps.
>
> - I have sold several of the CND removal systems packets for $5. I tell
the
> clients "Do not peek for 10 minutes."
>
> - All of them are absolutely UNforgiving in application...you canNOT touch
the
> skin or it will create a ledge or it will lift (or both!) You must have a
clean,
> complete margin around the entire nail bed from start of one sidewall up
and
> around the top of the nail down to the other side. Use a cuticle stick, or

> Simmy's idea, an acetone-dipped corrector pen to clean up before you cure.
Be
> sure to cap the free edges, too.
>
> - All of them are absolutely FORGIVING in wear and tear...I have done all
the
> things we tell our clients not to do: filed them, clipped them off with
> clippers, used them as tools--scraping labels off things, etc. and I do
not have
> any free-edge wear and tear...only regrowth at the cuticle.
>
>
> - I have changed my thinking about appointments. I no longer have a full
book of
> standing appointments. Instead, each week I have several openings that I
fill on
> the fly--gives me much more flexibility for those who want an occasional
> manicure that lasts longer than a few days.
>
>
> I have been telling clients this is a revolutionary new nail product...and
they
> will love it. And they do.
>
>
> Karen Hodges
> Morning Glory
> Key West
>
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