Thursday, December 16, 2010

♥ Icy Christmas Trees ♥










indoors

2 coats of Icing By Claire's Manic Monday a dark green
2 coats of Confetti My Favorite Martian diagonally graduating away from the tips.
1 layer of sponging with Confetti My Favorite Martian
1 coat of ELF Twinkle, a sparse iridescent glitter covering the sponged area
1 coat of  Wet n' Wild Rock Solid Sparkling Diamonds, applied over sponged area.









before TC, This ELF polish "Twinkle" dries matte.






A Quickie on Sponging; there are several great videos on you-tube on sponging, my new technique is to apply polish to the area I wish to sponge, getting alot of coverage by applying polish normally then when it's dry to go over the whole area with a sponge blending the sponged area with the base colour. This cuts down on the actual sponging, so I really only have to sponge a small area and go over the area I painted to get a slightly textured look.

These two polish shades are not the best colours to do a short tutorial with, but after the mammoth amount of snow my town received, I need to remind myself of the beautiful greenery that is all covered up. I will be doing a few more sponged looks this week, but today I needed GREEN!

so here is my first 'coat' of confetti my favirote martian,  I didn't want to have a straight line, so I haphazardly applied the polish (from base to tip) in a curve, This is a dense glass fleck polish, so I wasn't worried about coverage.


I went over the area again, trying to create a jagged not-so-perfect look


I then got out my sponge an applied a drop of the confetti my favirote martian and followed the outline I created in my first two steps. There is some texture visible. I like this and think it adds to the appeal of a sponge mani look.


In this photo, I have added the ELF iridescent glitter polish, a coat of WnW Rock Solid Sparkling Diamonds and a coat of Nailene Top Coat.



HERE is a few interesting tid bits in addition to my post yesterday;


apply any lotion around cuticles using a small brush.



and 25 min after applying polish. I forgot to take a before photo but I really blobbed this polish on my finger♥


 Here is a before of my full mani, It was actually hard for me to do a messy job! I paint my nails so much that I really don't make a lot of mistakes, or, mistakes that need major correcting.



 and after picking away at the polish mistakes and washing my hands..... I still had a few bits of polish to remove with acetone, but this method definitely cuts down on the use of acetone.




 Here is another experiment I did with lotion to show the effect that using a moisturizer around your cuticle can have.

L - R;     no lotion  -  Lotion applied before polish  -  lotion applied after polish



no lotion    -    Lotion applied before polish    -    lotion applied after polish


no lotion    -    Lotion applied before polish    -    lotion applied after polish



this is the back of my hand; Plain polish stuck to my skin through 2 hand washings, whereas the polish blob in the middle that I applied over moisturizer I was able to pick off and was gone completely after 1 wand washing. The polish on the far right that I applied moisturizer on top of  stayed put.

This means that there was enough moisture in the sample in the middle for polish to NOT ADHERE to my skin. applying a moisturizer, or Vaseline or diaper creme( lol ~ but it works awesome ) to your cuticles will prevent you from using excessive means to remove any polish mistakes.


And after that science lesson, here is a few more photos of my current mani.....



 Icing by Claire's Manic Monday my base colour = shouldn't this be blue, and not green?





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