How to Give Yourself a Salon-Worthy Manicure

image


By Kathleen Hou


When there are several different types of ice outside and you’re saving up for spring Gianvito Rossi sandals, weekly visits to the nail salon are a chore. To find out how to give yourself a salon-worthy manicure that won’t chip quickly, the Cut spoke to fashion’s favorite manicurist and salon owner Jin Soon Choi. She breaks down the basic steps in the GIFs below.


Related: 3 Easy Ways to Wear a Hair Comb Like Keira Knightley


image

Step 1: Remove all the existing polish from your hands. Clip your nails in preparation for the desired nail shape. If your response is “Uh, I don’t know,” then go with the natural shape of your cuticle (the ridgy part where your skin meets your nail). Everyone’s cuticles, like snowflakes, are shaped differently. If your cuticles are round, go with a round nail shape. Slightly oval is generally flattering on most nails, making nails beds appear longer, and for that, Choi suggests cutting your nail once from the right and left edges of each nail.


Related: How to Get Perfectly Slept-in, Messy Curls


image

Step 2: Cutting your nails this way makes it easier to file them into an oval shape, with the point being the tallest part of the oval. When you file, file from side to side, rather than in an up-and-down sawing motion. Also, file at a slight angle so you don’t grate on the skin underneath the nail.


Related: 3 Perfect, New Red Lip Shades


image

Step 3: I’ve found this step to be slightly extraneous, but you can also use a nail buffer to further smooth down the tips so that your nails don’t tear your Wolford stockings. You can also use a nail buffer on the top of your nails, to make them look extra shiny.

image

Step 4: Apply cuticle oil to your cuticles and let them soften for a few minutes. Soak your nails if you feel extra inclined. Then take a cuticle pusher and push back your now-softened cuticles until they appear as a thin line on your nail. Do not cut them. Cutting too much of your cuticles makes them a bloody mess, and cuticles actually serve to prevent bacteria and fungi from entering your nails.


Related: How to Get the New ‘Rich Girl’ Hair


image

Step 5: Steps 1 through 4 have been for the aesthetic purposes of your manicure. These next few steps are to make sure your manicure doesn’t immediately chip. Start first by wiping your nail one final time. You want to remove all of the grease from the cuticle oil and your nails’ natural oils. If your nail is too wet or too oily, the polish will not properly adhere and will chip.


image

Step 6: Apply a base coat. You need this to prevent polish from having direct nail contact and staining your nails. Some, like Eva Chen, even apply a bonder base coat.


Related: 7 Real-Life Backstage Beauty Lessons


image

Step 7: Paint your nails. In this case, Choi is using JINsoon Pop Orange. The easiest way to paint your nails is to make sure your first stroke starts from the edge. Utilize the natural shape of the brush to make sure it is as wide as possible.


image

Step 8: Let your second stripe overlap with the first to cover the rest of the nail. Wait about two minutes until your second coat.


Related: How to Totally Disguise Chipped Nail Polish


image

Step 9: Don’t forget to also paint the free edge, the top portion of the nail, and then finish with a top coat like JINsoon Top Gloss. Your top coat acts as a sealer, sealing all the other polish layers below. And there, in nine steps, you have a finished manicure.


See more from The Cut:


How to Draw a Galaxy on Your Nails 

20 Sexy, Chic Pieces of Lingerie to Up Your Game

6 Hours of Extreme Catharsis With the Women of The Bachelor

My Magical Week of Working Out With Jane Fonda

Rihanna and Leo Celebrate Their First Tabloid Photo