Simple Nail Art Designs Biography
(Source google.com)
Nail art is a creative activity that draws
This is a mixture of a powder and a liquid. The mixture starts to harden in
30–40 seconds after application and gets to its final hardness in fifteen
minutes. Powder and liquid acrylics can be removed by using a variety of
solvents (usually acetone is used). Usually it takes 15 to 20 minutes to remove
the nail. Another material,
commonly called "UV Top Coat" (in correct terms a polymer resin),
hardens under ultraviolet light. These can show a wider range of properties
(flexibility, strength, etc.) but may be more expensive. They cannot be removed
by organic solvents, but only by filing (or left to grow out with the natural
nail).
Another popular
alternative to acrylic or gel preparations are fiberglass or silk wraps. They
are done by cutting pieces of actual fiberglass or silk fabric to fit on the
surface of the nail or tip and then it is sealed down with a resin or glue.
These are an alternative for those who are allergic to chemicals used in the
acrylic or gel process. Other materials can be used, as well as combinations of
them. There are also temporary, cheaper flexible tips that can be quickly glued
at home without help from a professional. Acrylic nail
powders are available in a variety of colours and can use "special
effects" such as contours, sparkles and the very popular French manicure
(pink and white appearance).
Nail art is a
creative activity that draws pictures or designs fingernails. It a type of art.
These days fingernails and toenails are seen by some as important points of
beauty.
Also, it is a type
of fashion activity, related to manicuring. There are commercial shops ('nail
bars') where nails are worked on to polymer chains, spacing them to make the film flexible after drying. That way
it resists cracking or flaking caused by the natural movement of the nail.. Nail polish was
used in the ancient world. In China
it started off being made from a combination of beeswax, egg whites, gelatin,
vegetable dyes, and gum arabic and rose petals. The Chinese would dip their
hands in this mixture until their finger nails turned red or pink. In Ancient
Egypt henna was used. The henna stained their fingernails orange, which turned
dark red or brown after the stain matured. In 1300 BC, the colour of the nail
polish reflected social rank. The colours gold and silver were favoured; later,
black and red were the favoured make them attractive. The main product is
acrylic nails with ready-made designs which can be stuck on top of natural
nails. Nail polish, or
nail varnish, is a lacquer applied to human fingernails or toenails to decorate
and/or protect the nail. Today’s nail polishes are usually nitrocellulose in a
solvent such as butyl acetate or ethyl acetate.
They
may be clear or coloured
with pigments. The coating has a plasticizers (e.g. camphor). This links
polymer chains, spacing them to make the film flexible after drying.
That way
it resists cracking or flaking caused by the natural movement of the
nail.. Nail polish was
used in the ancient world. In China
it started off being made from a combination of beeswax, egg whites,
gelatin,
vegetable dyes, and gum arabic and rose petals. The Chinese would dip
their
hands in this mixture until their finger nails turned red or pink. In
Ancient
Egypt henna was used. The henna stained their fingernails orange, which
turned
dark red or brown after the stain matured. In 1300 BC, the colour of the
nail
polish reflected social rank. The colours gold and silver were favoured;
later,
black and red were the favoured colours. Red is the colour Cleopatra
wore. By the turn of the 9th century, nails were tinted with scented red
oils, and
polished or buffed with a chamois cloth, rather than simply polished. In
the
19th and early 20th centuries, people pursued a polished rather than
painted
look by massaging tinted powders and creams into their nails, then
buffing them
shiny. After the creation of automobile paint, Cutex produced the first
modern
nail polish in 1917. Synthetic nail polish was introduced in the 1920s
in Paris.
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