At 12:38 AM 1/11/2005, bill kilpatrick wrote:
>there's an interesting contribution to the "fingers vs
>fingerpicks vs plectrums" thread over on
>[EMAIL PROTECTED] that details how to
>repair torn fingernails with perm paper (the guy is a
>hair dresser) and glue.
>
>- bill


I don't know that this is useful to most lutenists, maybe the Italianate 
archlute crowd, but when I have a guitar gig pending and have damaged 
nails, I do something similar.  I will apply a thin layer of some 
incarnation of cyanoacrylate (i.e., "super" glues) to the damaged area.  I 
almost always use commercially available "nail" glues because they seem a 
little more pliable and less rigid.  I will place a sliver of coffee filter 
paper over the glue, torn to fit and leaving the jagged edges to be more 
absorbent and "blend-able."  Depending on the nature of the damage, I may 
fold the paper over the edge of the tear and under the nail as well.  After 
the glue becomes tacky, I will layer more cyanoacrylate over this whole 
assembly.  After it is completely dry, I blend the edges into the nail and 
buff it to a shine with multi-stage cosmetic nail buffers.  The end result 
should be almost invisible and function essentially like the nail itself, 
both in typical punteado upstrokes and in rasgueado...of course it should, 
but it sometimes requires a mid-process abort, especially in positioning 
the paper, and a restart.  It will be thicker and certainly more rigid than 
nail, but it will do in a bind.

If the nail is lost, I will cut acrylic (either a ping-pong ball or the 
finer end of artificial fingernails that is designed to be glued over the 
nail) to fit and glue it _under_ the nail with the acrylic protruding to 
span the lost area.  The joint will receive the glue-and-coffe-filter-paper 
treatment described above.

Best,
Eugene 



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