I had a brush one time that when I would wipe it on the towel it would leave 
yellow streaks, only when  the (ferrule)sp? touched the towel. I don't know if 
it was something in the metal or what. It was a cheapy from Sally's. It did 
that 
as soon as I started using it too. I always had good luck with the Entity and 
Atwood brushes. Atwood brushes where about $20 and Entity $60. Glad I don't 
have 
to buy those brushes anymore. Gel is all I do now.

Angie Wingerter




________________________________
From: Katherine Fahrig <[email protected]>
To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Sent: Fri, October 1, 2010 9:17:01 AM
Subject: Re: NailTech:: Myth or truth?


I thought that she was asking why her acrylic product yellowed not her brush. 
I've never had a brush yellow, my brushes have always been Russian sable and 
I've never seen them turn yellow. Maybe I'm not understanding what you mean. Do 
you mean a contaminated brush causing yellowing acrylic? 

I was not saying that the cause of yellowing acrylic is due to ALL of the 
things 
listed happening at the same time, it can happen if just one of the things 
listed happens. Cleaning you brush in monomer and then putting a cover on it is 
the same as not cleaning your brush at all. Entity makes a brush with a cap 
that 
has a hole in the tip so that the liquid can evaporate out of the brush so that 
it should not hold contaminates in the brush. Notice I said "should not". I 
have 
used the Entity brush for many years with the cap and have never had a product 
contamination problem from the brush. I'm not saying that a contaminated brush 
is always the problem, I meant that it could be the problem.

My list is by no means compleat, this is just a list of what I have experienced 
or what I've been taught at one of the gazillion classes I've taken or what 
other techs have experienced and shared with me. 

Katherine 
St. Louis, MO
Sent from my iPad

On Sep 30, 2010, at 10:08 PM, Pati <[email protected]> wrote:



>Katherine, 
> I have to disagree a bit.  Although the things you mention *could* attribute 
>to 
>the cause of a brush yellowing...I will add...I have used CND monomer (I use 
>Moxie but it has happened with retention+ also) and powders forever...and I 
>love 
>the way it stays on and looks nice. Anyway... IF I use a brush with a 
>cover..the 
>bristles tend to yellow...it depends on the brush also.  I use ONLY cnd 
>monomer 
>and never use a different monomer...well if I try one..I use a different 
>brush..also..I do not use brush cleaner...haven't in a million years!  I clean 
>my brush with the monomer...which I also pour fresh each and every time.  I 
>lay 
>my brush on it's side to store...so the monomer does not pool into the ferrule 
>of the brush.  I don't know why it happens but it does...
>
>
>Pati 
>
>'Good friends are like stars... 
>You don't always see them, But you know they are always there.
>
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Katherine Fahrig <[email protected]>
>To: [email protected] <[email protected]>
>Sent: Thu, Sep 30, 2010 10:32 am
>Subject: Re: NailTech:: Myth or truth?
>
>
>Yellowing acrylics happen because;  Contaminated liquid - leaving liquid in 
>the 
>dapping dish after doing one set of nails, then adding  more liquid and never 
>cleaning out the dapping dish.  -Using one of those pump liquid dispensers, 
>liquid left in the lid can go back  down into the main liquid chamber 
>resulting 
>in the same thing as not cleaning  out the dapping dish.  -Brush cleaner in 
>the 
>acrylic liquid.   Contaminated sculpting brush -using the same sculpting brush 
>with more than one product.  -Not cleaning the brush properly. - Leaving brush 
>cleaner in the brush, i.e. taking the brush out of the brush  cleaner dabbing 
>it 
>off then dipping right into the liquid with brush cleaner  still in the brush. 
> 
>Expired liquid  Liquid that has been left in the sun or extreme heat i.e. the 
>car.  Sometimes it's the top coat that has yellowed not the acrylic.  Some 
>sealant gels made for acrylics will yellow if they are old or have been  left 
>in 
>extreme heat.  If I can think of anything else I'll post again. Maybe someone 
>else can think of  more reasons for yellow acrylic. The reasons are legion :-) 
> 
>Yellow gel? My brand is Light Elegance and the ONLY reason for LE to look 
>yellow  
>is if the nail is lifted. LE gel will not yellow, well I don't know what would 
> 
>happen if it was expired or left in the heat. I go through it so fast it can't 
> 
>possibly get old and I never leave it in the car.   I can't speak for other 
>brands, I noticed that the Shellac French yellowed on my  client who went to 
>the 
>beach for vacation.   Katherine St. Louis, MO Sent from my iPad  On Sep 29, 
>2010, at 4:47 PM, Veronica Mora <[email protected]> wrote:  Thank you so 
>much Kathryn, That helped out a TON!!!  but I have another  question, why is 
>it 
>that too much liquid can cause yellowing? That is the only  thing i can think 
>of 
>that is making my nails yellow. I don't smoke, my products  isn't old, and 
>I've 
>only had them on for about a week.           > Date: Wed, 29 Sep 2010 14:04:59 
>-0700 > From: [email protected] > Subject: Re: NailTech:: Myth or 
>truth? 
>> To: [email protected] >  > Acrylic is not harmful to your nails. 
>Manicurists who butcher the natural nail  and surrounding skin are harmful to 
>your nails. People say that acrylics are  harmful because they went to a NSS 
>salon and had their nails butchered or they  ripped their acrylic nails off 
>themselves and damaged their own nails, then  blamed it on the acrylic. Anyone 
>can do the same amount of damage with gels.  It's not the product, it's how 
>the 
>product is applied and/or removed. FYI  acrylic is safely removed by soaking 
>in 
>acetone. Picking, ripping or biting them  off causes damaged nails. >  > Gels 
>are a pre mixed, UV cured nail enhancement that is light weight,  flexible, 
>will 
>not yellow and is extremely durable with no odor. I prefer to use  gels, I 
>like 
>them better because they are very easy to file and have a great  shine without 
>buffing, it is a personal decision.  >  > Acrylics are a liquid and powder 
>product that the manicurist must mix and then  apply the mixed product to the 
>nail. Acrylic has an odor.  >  > I have nothing against acrylics except the 
>odor, that is why I am a gel master  :-)  >  > Katherine > St. Louis, MO > 
>Sent 
>from my iPad >  > On Sep 29, 2010, at 1:57 PM, Veronica Mora 
><[email protected]> wrote: >  > Can anyone tell me why everyone says 
>that 
>acrylic is so harmful to your nails?  Is it true or False and why? > another 
>question is that, clients often ask what is the difference of gels and  
>acrylics, which one is better and which one is worse ?  > --  > You received 
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