It's really easy. First put a base coat on each nail. Next paint your nails white. Then take 2 or more colors And put then within reach. Fill a plastic cup with water upto the top. Take a color and put 1 or 2 drops in the water. It should spread put and make a circle. Continue and make sure u repeat each color at least twice. When u r done with that take a toothpick and make a design in the water. After that stick in your finger where u like the design best. Blow on it. Take a toothpick and twist it around to take out the extra polish. Take your finger out and waa la! You have done water marble nails!
As marble is porous, any moisture in the air or liquid water can penetrate it, therefore a drop in temperature below 4 degrees Celsius will result in any water within the marble expanding, and the marble will be cracked and damaged.
The Taj Mahal is made of marble.
The Taj Mahal is made from Marble :) :P
The statue of david is made of polished marble. Marble can only be carved!
Because marble lasts longer than stone
room temperature
No, but the polish tends to get messy around your nails. You can cover up your skin with some tape, and then dip in to avoid the mess.
Marble nails. It's easy and beautiful on your nails. Check it out on Youtube and they will show you how. It's all by dipping your finger in water that has drops of different nail polish colors. Just search 'marble nails" on Youtube.
Tough as Nails - 2010 It's Marble Madness 1-9 was released on: USA: 19 May 2010
Because the marble has a higher density than the water does
A marble will sink faster in salt water compared to fresh water due to the increased density of salt water. The speed at which the marble sinks will depend on factors such as the size and weight of the marble, as well as the concentration of salt in the water. Generally, the denser the water, the faster the marble will sink.
Yes. Raw marble (untreated marble) will absorb water. However this doesn't mean it will absorb so much water it will have a significantly larger mass. Treated marble that has a thin silicon layer will not absorb water.
I read this on another forum somewhere: Try using a small piece of fishing line, tie the ends around something, not your fingers, and use it like dental floss. Put the fishing line on the marble surface and try "cutting" the liquid nails like that, to remove it from the marble. Also you might try to apply a small amount of heat with a hair dryer. Liquid nails makes a "remover" product, which may or may not work on marble:http://paint-and-supplies.hardwarestore.com/50-278-adhesive-caulk-removers/liquid-nails-adhesive-and-caulk-remover-103697.aspx In general, the following warning probably applies to all Liquid Nails adhesives:Product may stain marble and granite.http://www.liquidnails.com/products/product.jsp?productId=48 Might need to search for tips on how to cover/mask/remove stains on marble...
If the marble sinks in water, it is more dense than water. Objects that are denser than water will sink, while objects with lower density will float.
Nails do not rust in water. Nails only rust in water if oxygen is present. This is because the iron in nails react with oxygen and water to form a compound called hydrated iron(III) oxide.
yes it is because it does not absorb water. <><><><> Above is not quite correct. Marble is water resistant. Different grades of marble have different rates of water absorption. One major US building was skinned with marble, and had to be redone- the marble selected was the wrong grade, absorbed more water than was covered in the design, and marble panels were bowing away from the framework. It does not absorb water like wood, but it DOES absorb some water.
If you're speaking about nails as in "hammer & nails" then the effect of water and oxygen will eventually corrode them by rusting.