Monday, July 23, 2012

Glitter topcoats - Part One

So I decided to do a short series on glitter topcoats and why I think they're so awesome. Probably the most obvious reason is versatility. You can turn a more sedate creme polish into a much more eye-catching look with just one coat. It's almost like doubling your collection of polishes with that extra bottle of topcoat!

The glitter topcoat I'm using in today's post is the same one I used on my ring finger accent nail in my previous post, Catrice Cosmetics A Million Styles in Have An Ice Day.

To show a few of the possibilities, I chose (clockwise from top left for all photo sets): Essie - Bikini So Teeny (a pastel), Essie - Sand Tropez (a muted neutral), Catrice Cosmetics - Caught on the Red Carpet (a classic starlet red), Chanel - Vendetta (a dark, vampy color; one coat).

So here's what I started with...

Just polish, no topcoat.

Nice enough colors on their own, right? Now these are the same colors coming up in the next group of photos, with one coat of Have An Ice Day, taken in regular indoor lighting.

Oooooh, glitter!
The topcoat definitely amps up the polishes and they take on a beautiful, fine particle glitter. 

But hang on, it gets better! 

In my previous post I wrote about how in direct sunlight Have An Ice Day takes on a fiery, prismatic shine. There haven't been too many sunny days in Munich recently, but the bright halogen bulbs in our entryway provide a pretty close comparison in the next set of pictures.
WOOOOOOOW, glitter!!!!!
Pretty cool, right? Even still photos don't fully do it justice; it looks gorgeous in motion. That's part of why the photos in the last set all look a bit different from each other, since I was moving my hand around trying to get a photo that captured the light best.

I've worn this topcoat with Bikini So Teeny twice (once on all fingers, the second time with one glitter accent nail) and really liked it, but I was really happy with how it turned out on the Vendetta. It almost looks like a photo of some of the "nebula" nail art photos I've seen, but not nearly as time-intensive!

A topcoat like this would be great not only for evening, but would also be fantastic for a daytime wedding outdoors. Bikini So Teeny could be a cute and easy "something blue"and the Sand Tropez or a similar neutral would be just muted enough even with the glitter to still be festive but not too distracting.

Now go out and grab yourself a bottle of glitter topcoat and start having some fun!

Thanks for visiting!

Friday, July 20, 2012

Orange you glad you got this polish?

Ok, that was an awful pun. I admit it. But I guess summer makes me a little goofy sometimes. All the heat.

Speaking of summer, I'd been looking for a juicy orange polish and picked up a bottle of Catrice Cosmetics Exotica, a limited edition color from their Coolibri range.

My collection of Catrice polishes keeps growing, since they're about three Euros a bottle, they make a ton of great colors and the polish itself is usually very good. The photos I took were three days after I first painted them, and there's almost no wear, including on the tips.

Right hand with glittery ring finger accent nail ;-)

To create this look, I started with my usual one coat of CND Stickey Base Coat.

I then added two coats of Exotica. It has a very fine shimmer in it and applies well with no streaking. The glitter accent nail was one coat of Catrice's A Million Styles Effect Top Coat in Have an Ice Day. I'll do a separate post on that soon because it's probably the most fun glitter top coat I've used. It looks nice here, but in direct sunlight you see this crazy awesome, almost holographic blast of sparkle.

I topped it all off with a coat of Seche Vite topcoat.

Aaaaaand here's the left hand.

Thanks for visiting!

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Mint Green and Gold

I love the color combination of mint green and gold. There's something about it that conveys a discreet sophistication to me. It might have to do with my boundless adoration for Ladurée, the French pastry shop that I fell in love with on one my earlier trips to Paris. Every trip I've made back since then, I've stopped by for a box of their macaroons. If you think, as I once did, that macaroons are always these crumbly, dry hockey pucks that taste like tanning lotion smells (coconut and, well, who knows what else...) there's a whole other world out there.

The macaroons at Ladurée are light little merengue jewels, with flavors as varied as dark chocolate, rose (yes, they really taste like roses smell!), blackberry, pistachio and a vanilla that's far from boring.


Image Credit: letartinegourmand.com


So notice the packaging behind those little sweet morsels of heaven? Mint green and gold are Ladurée's signature colors. When I bought a bottle of Essie's Navigate Her I knew the shade reminded me of something I really liked, although at first I couldn't quite remember what. Then once I got it home and played with it a bit I whipped this up:



To create this look, I started with my usual coat of CND Stickey Base Coat.  

I then applied two coats of Essie Navigate Her, the mint green background color.
I stamped the wave pattern using a generic gold stamping polish.
I finished off this manicure by using Essence Matt topcoat to mute the effect a bit.




Thanks for visiting!

Sunday, May 20, 2012

The Megan Draper Mani

I'm a huge fan of "Mad Men". Have been since the first season. While playing with a beautiful new green ANNY polish I got a few days ago I did this stamped mani.


So why am I calling it the Megan Draper Mani? The deep green creme polish stamped with a shimmering gold in a somewhat Mod pattern that likely would have been popular in the second half of the 60's is a look the young and fashion-forward new Mrs. Draper could appreciate. I like to think it's perhaps how she would've done her nails when she sang "Zou Bisou Bisou" to her husband at his birthday party...if nail stamping was around in 1966, of course.

For this look, I started off with a coat of CND Stickey Base Coat and applied two coats of ANNY Green Racing Drag. The ANNY polishes, by the way, are fantastic. Huge range of shades, highly pigmented and they apply like silk. I also have very few tipwear issues with their colors.

I then used a no-name generic gold stamping polish to stamp the full nail design shown.

I finished up by sealing it with a coat of Seche Vite top coat.

Thanks for visiting!




Friday, May 18, 2012

First Manicure Post!

Ever since I discovered nail stamping almost a year ago, I've just completely fallen in love with it. I love what seems to be an endless range of color combinations and designs you can play with on those ten little canvases that are literally right at your fingertips.

To create this look, I started with CND Stickey Base Coat, then applied two coats of Chanel Vendetta (a very dark bluish purple with a subtle fine shimmer) for the background color.

For the stamping polish, I used Essence Silver Stampy Polish on an XL nail plate and chose the full nail design you see in the photo.

I then sealed it with a coat of Seche Vite top coat.

The design reminds me in some ways of traditional Japanese woodcuts or textiles.

Thanks for visiting!