On Mon, Sep 15, 2008 at 10:04 AM, Vito Hotmail <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>  *it has nothing to do with the gel... it has everything to do with me...
> i need to practice...maybe oneday*
> * *
> *Vito*
>
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>

My heart is breaking reading this thread on Gels and the trouble many of you
are having.  I had to just speak up.  What I am about to share definitely
works with Star Nail Gel, I can't say it will work for any other brand.
Here's a few tricks.  First, if you feel like the gel is a little too runny
and moves into the skin before you get the nail in the light, try keeping
your gel in your refrigerator.  Colder gel has the feeling of a thicker
viscosity while warmer gel has the feeling of a thinner viscosity.

Next, use a brush that is nylon and rounded (not square across the top).  A
good soft Nylon brush with a rounded shape will make life so much easier
around the skin.

Then, work THIN.  What have you got to lose in doing more thin coats instead
of one or two thick coats?  Applying thick only means you'll have to chase
your gel and do lots of filing in the end.  Apply a very thin coat (like
polishing a nail) and do three or four instead of one big goopy mess.

Another trick...(this is where it def works for Star Nail and may not for
another brand)....if you are just using clear gel as an overlay you do not
REALLY need to cure three minutes each layer.  One minute is enough to crisp
that gel up so that your next layer won't damage the first layer as it is
going on.  Do a minute cure (in a 9 watt lamp) for each layer.  On the LAST
layer do your three minute cure.  The UV rays are still penetrating the
previous layers and giving them the long final cure.  In fact, look at it
this way... if you did three layers... layer one got the initial minute.
Layer two got a minute and layer one got it's second minute.  Layer three is
cured for three minutes which means layer one actually got five minutes and
layer two got four minutes.  See where I am going with this?

Taking your time and thinking of gel like POLISH and doing the thin coats
may take a little longer on your application, but I guarantee you will
hardly have to file.  Maybe a little buffer block over the surface to smooth
any imperfections at the most.

Vito, don't be so hard on yourself.  Good exposure to good education will
give you the confidence you need to pull off a slamming set.  Keep
practicing on tips to get your application down.  One day you will say, "Oh
my god, gels are so easy!  I can't believe I was so hard on myself!".

Elaine Watson
aka Elaine (was) from Maine  haha
-- 
Elaine T. Watson
Star Nail International
Vice President of Marketing and Sales
Global Education Director
800.782.7624 extension 321
fax 661.257.5847
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Blog: itsnotarealjob.blogspot.com

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