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Nail buffing

Act of polishing the nail to make it look more consistent and shiny

Nail buffing

Act of polishing the nail to make it look more consistent and shiny

Nail buffer

Nail buffing is the act of polishing the nail using buffers of successively finer grit in order to make nails look more consistent and shiny. A paste is used to fill ridges on nail surfaces.

Buffing is also done prior to the application of nail products or artificial nails to help the product adhere to the nail. However, excessive buffing should be avoided

Technique

  • The emery board nail file should not be used to buff the surface of the nails. They are meant only to shape them from the side.
  • The medium grit can be used to smooth ridges and surface irregularities. This can be done before applying nail polish or as a first step before finer buffing.
  • The fine-grained buff is used to smooth the nail to a matte surface.
  • The finest finishing grit gives the nails a glossy shine.

Traditionally, a buffing cream and chamois skin have been used. Modern instruments are much more efficient and are similar in appearance to a large rubber eraser, with different sides for different levels of coarseness. As buffing is gentle surface abrasion, it should not be performed too strongly or too often or thinning of the nail may result.

In a manicure, nail buffing is an alternative to chemical nail polish.

In gel manicures

Buffing is used prior to the application of gel nail polish to help the polish adhere better to the nail. For best adhesion results after buffing, the nail technician should remove any excess buffing oil before polishing.

Safety

Applying excessive pressure while buffing can generate heat and pain and could possibly lead to infection. Excessive buffing for prolonged periods of time can also wear down the nail plate. While buffing, only 5% of the nail plate thickness should be removed.

References

References

  1. Elaine Almond. (1994). "Manicure, Pedicure And Advanced Nail Techniques". Cengage Learning EMEA.
  2. Samantha Taylor. (2004). "S/NVQ Level 1 Introducing Beauty Therapy". Heinemann.
  3. Draelos, Zoe Diana. (2015-10-08). "Cosmetic Dermatology: Products and Procedures". John Wiley & Sons.
  4. Milady. (2020-03-19). "Milady Standard Nail Technology". Cengage Learning.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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