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What kind of nails are suitable for manicure?

My best friend and I are manicurists. I do it two or three times a year because I care more about the maintenance of my nails. She does it almost once a month and a half. When her nails grew almost new, she had to redo them. Tired of looking at colors, her sister has a headache every time she goes to manicure, because her hands are really not suitable for nails. ...

The first one is that when your hands are placed horizontally, the flatter your nails are, the easier it is to make them. Unless you apply nail polish directly for phototherapy, you don't need to apply nail polish, otherwise you must flatten your nails, because nail polish should be attached to your nails. Although it has radians, it is "even" and has the same radians. If your nails are too curved and protrude, nail polish will not stick to your nails easily. Even if it does, it will take a long time to be completely fixed. This process is very troublesome and the manicurist will be very busy.

Then the nails are hard and fit. Thin nails are not easy to do, which may be caused by natural calcium deficiency, or it may be because they are done too often and the nails are polished very thin. If you don't stick your nails, too thin nails will knock off a piece of nail polish and become incomplete. People with obsessive-compulsive disorder usually go back to the nail salon to make up their colors, and the disadvantage of too soft nails is that they will crack immediately if left behind ... that's my best friend.

These are fingernails. If the toenails are long, they are suitable for beauty. Many people's little finger nails are small, or slightly deformed because of wearing high heels or injuries. It is difficult to draw them evenly after several layers have grown. Totoenails generally doesn't need nail patches, and the hardness and thickness don't have to worry about losing color when you knock.