Gold does not tarnish. If it's tarnishing it's not real gold.
If the nails are acrylic, soak them in acetone. The acrylic will soften, if you put a couple of marbles or something of the sort in the bowl with the acetone and knock them around with the nails, it will help them to pop off.
When I take them off I take a toothpick and go in-between my real nail and the fake nail. It usually comes right off, but if it doesn't then try to put tape ontop of the fake nail and soak them in nail pollish remover.
I would get nail polish remover without acetone in it. It helps take out the color, without ruining acrylics or other false nails. Also it helps protect your real nails as well. Hope this helps.(:
Nylon....Others come off real easy.
Because Revlon made the world's first real nail polish in 1932. All other nail polishes are just copies of Revlon's, but Revlon has always had the first and best formula.
I have a full head of long extentions...my real hair is a pixie cut. So I ran into this problem when I first got them. Acetone nail polish remover is the only thing that worked! But a word to the wise...if the oil hasn't saturated your hair, then make a mixture of the remover with your shampoo(repeat if needed) then use a good conditioner to keep from drying out your hair.
You will need nail polish remover, bleach (good bleach required- none of that 99 cent, watered down stuff), & a low or no lint rag (I used an old sock, right side out). First dip your rag in the nail polish remover & wipe over the ink you want to remove IN ONE DIRECTION ONLY. Yes, the thermal paper WILL turn black, but stay with me here. Next, using a different part of your rag, dip into the bleach- again, wiping IN ONE DIRECTION ONLY- & wipe your paper. If any of the ink you want to remove still remains wipe with nail polish remover again (you will not need to wipe with bleach again). You can start with the bleach first, but I find the paper is less likely to tear or nap if you start with the polish remover. Above all, BE GENTLE. You will want to practice before starting in on the real deal-- Walmart receipts are great for practice.
While you can't actually gold plate your nails in the same way jewelry is gold plated there are some options. There are companies that apply gold plate to fake nails which can then be glued onto your real nails using the traditional method, Also there is nail polish with gold in it, although it is very expensive.
Yes, just fine. Just be sure to use student grade (low quality) paints instead of artist quality. The artist quality ones have a more rubbery texture when dry and tend to peel off. Mix any color and use a clear topcoat to seal it (necessary). Be careful with yellows and oranges, they're more likely to stain your nails if you have them on for long periods of time. To prevent any staining, use a base coat to protect your nail.
Yes, it's two years after the bottle was opened. You can try this stuff; if you put it on and it's real thick and hard to brush out, throw it away because it's no good anymore. (They sell nail polish thinner, but once nail polish starts to get thick, it's toast.)
Yeah it does work on real nails Hun I use it all the time and it looks great :) xx