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What Color Polish Best Fits You

By on January 4, 2007
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Your Nail Polish Color is Magenta
How you’re unique: You’re confident – and you show everyone the true you
Why your style rocks: You have the attitude to carry the most outrageous outfits off
What this color says about you: “Look at me. I know you want to!”
What Color Nail Polish Best Fits You?

iVillage says I am Pinks
You’re feminine and flirty! Whether it’s a ruffled skirt or kitten heels, you’re all about looking demure — and men can’t help but fall under your spell. Your friends are one of your top priorities, and your gal pals know they can always count on you for gossip-packed Sunday brunches and fun girls’ nights out.

iVillage Quiz

I love all colors and could never pick just one but I think these kind of quizzes are fun and wanted to share.

Barbie Loves Mac

By on January 3, 2007
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And I love Barbie. I don’t care what anyone says… I loved and will always love Barbie. Growing up, I had a entire room dedicated to my world of Barbie. And, in spite of what people say about her, I never looked at Barbie as a role model or someone I had to emulate. She was a doll for crying out loud. A fun stylish doll with a fab house and a dreamy pink convertible.

I saw pics of the MAC & Barbie collaboration collection and one of the polishes has me totally intrigued. Not to mention the fantastic packaging. I’ll be getting more than just the polish.

So here’s the skinny on this nail laquer:

Toast of the Town: Tarnished Brown with green and red multidimensional pearl. Multidimensional pearl? Good gravy. Stick a fork in me…

Check out pics and detailed descriptions of the entire collection on The Makeup Bag

Nail Polish Art

By on January 3, 2007
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I love it!! Someone creating a painting from polish. You could never find all the crazy colors, glitters and shimmers of polish in a paint store. The art isn’t my style but I love the creativity.

Nail polish is the preferred medium for Horn Lake artist

By Barbara Bradley
December 12, 2006

Mary Lola Scott’s paintings may never hang in the Louvre. But artists there had it easy. They worked in oil paint. Scott creates her masterpieces in Revlon and L’Oreal.
Scott, 54, of Horn Lake, paints portraits, landscapes and still lifes with nail polish. She has to paint fast with her tiny nail brush before the quick-drying polish gets hard as cement.

Folks at Ripley’s Believe It or Not say Scott may be the world’s only nail polish master, and have purchased 11 of her works to hang in Ripley museums around the world. Scott has also been chosen from hundreds of contestants to be among the 12 finalists in the Dear Mr. Ripley contest.
At the moment she’s behind a car hurdler who can clear 101 cars. But you can vote for her at ripleys.com. The top three winners get vacations in Niagara Falls and Panama City. The winner will be announced Friday.

It takes about 30 bottles of paint to do an average painting, and no, they don’t chip. “You can’t even sand off the colors,” she said. They cost $500 to $4,000. She sold one recently to a hotel owner.
Scott got into serious polish painting when she moved to Horn Lake four years ago from Atlanta where she lived 20 years. She is married to Jon Scott, 68. She has two grown sons from a previous marriage who also paint and have helped her with some of her larger projects.
Scott was looking in vain for a paint that would make a flower painting glow. She found the answer when visiting a drugstore. “I saw all these brilliant colors, and that was just what I wanted,” she said.
Curious to know if there were fellow nail polish enthusiasts, she checked with Ripley’s. Folks there were excited.
“I’ve been in this business 29 years,” said Edward Meyer, vice president of exhibits and archives for Ripley Entertainment Inc., headquartered in Orlando, “and she’s the only one I’ve heard of who is doing this. You can smell the nail polish.”
He knows of a woman in South Carolina who painted a car with nail polish, he said. “But it was pretty ugly.”
Meyer later took Scott on a tour of Ripley’s warehouse of wonders in Orlando. She was most impressed with a huge painting of a Chinese emperor done on dryer lint.
Scott, who has been selling paintings since she was 15, has an unusual portfolio. She painted a swamp scene mural for the rapper Ludacris, about seven years ago, before he became famous. She painted it “with dead trees” in the hallway of his Fairburn, Ga., house.
Even more ludicrous, was the executive’s office she turned into a spaceship. “He wanted an aging, cracking up spaceship,” she said about the director of an online auto parts company in Lawrenceville, Ga. She painted the huge office in black overlaid with silver and with big windows that showed a meteorite nearly crashing in. Also outside the ship were planets and galaxies “and some of his auto parts swirling around.”
It’s still the first thing visitors to the company want to see.

That was the first time she dabbled in nail polish, she said. She used a metallic polish to create glowing planets.
Scott sees new vistas now. Fish would look great in Sally Hansen’s “prism.” She’d like to do more outer space art too. Maybe in Revlon’s “color beam.”
Scott’s painting is hardly the most extraordinary Meyer has seen in his days at Ripley. That honor goes to a man in Mexico City who painted nine portraits on a house fly with a hair. You could identify the faces.

Someone in Cleveland is a potential polish fanatic

By on January 3, 2007
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I guess for Kim Crow, Style Editor at the Plain Dealer, one article on polish is not enough for one day. At least this one has some good tips for DIY manis. I only quoted the most useful parts of the interview.



Can you give us some application secrets?
First I go under the nail bed at the top, to cover the under edge of the nail. Then I do a double diagonal stroke, like a V, then three strokes down the nail. That way, the polish lasts longer. The chipping always starts at the edge. Giving it that extra coat underneath helps prevent the chipping.

Any at-home nail maintenance tips?
I prefer natural nails. I use primer based on the healthiness of someone’s nail bed. There are special ones for brittle nails and
dry nails. Cuticle cream is really important, and should be used three or four times a day at home. It penetrates your nail bed, gives them moisture and flexibility, and your manicure lasts longer. If your nail is flexible, if you get a chip, it won’t chip in a giant chunk. Cuticle oil is recommended at night.

How long do we have to sit there, waiting for the polish to dry?
I recommend 15-20 minutes, but I can use quick-dry products when people are in a hurry. I always tell people be careful two to four hours after; don’t take a shower or wash your hair. If the polish gets wet before it sets, you’ll chip faster.


How long should a manicure last?
If you apply a topcoat every other day, it should last a whole week, on a natural nail. And use that cuticle cream every day! I do offer free touch-ups to my clients if they stop in with a chip.

Do you prefer any brand of polish?
I’ve work with the Jessica products for a long time, and I’ve seen a lot of good results with it. The line is based around keeping natural, healthy nails.


Full Plain Dealer Article

I have never used Jessica nail products but my interest is piqued. I’ll be sure to report back my experience.

Jumping on the bandwagon or Seriously late to the party?

By on January 3, 2007
in Uncategorized with 1 Comment

Or both? This article comes out of my hometown of Cleveland. While I laughed at Allure for mentioning Chanel’s Black Satin way after it was sold out and fetching ridiculous prices on ebay, it was still months ahead of this writer. Hey gals, if you don’t know yet, black polish is “in” (insert eyeroll here).

Polishing its image
No longer edgy, this hip nail color is putting stores and users in the black
Wednesday, January 03, 2007
Kim Crow Style Editor
The hottest look of fall/winter 2006 is right at your fingertips.


It has nothing to do with skinny jeans or leggings or even the ubiquitous tunic top.


It can be worn by every woman and even men if so inclined — the short, the heavy, the mature, the young — and you won’t break the bank while dipping your toe into the trend.
Black nail polish has managed to transcend its edgy Goth-girl roots to find mainstream success with everyone from celebrities such as Lindsay Lohan and Jessica Simpson to the saleswoman at the corner store.

“Oh, my God, you have no idea how popular black nails are,” laughed Tiffany Ford, owner of Salon Blu in Mayfield. “Women of all ages are wearing it. I’m pretty much ordering a box of it a week, we’re going through it so fast. I’m wearing it myself right now.”

“At first, I thought it was kind of gruesome,” said Jean Rini of Cleveland, who graciously agreed to model black polish for a Plain Dealer photo shoot. “But it’s really growing on me. It looks sophisticated.”

The look first cropped up during New York Fashion Week’s fall shows in February, but reached critical mass when Chanel launched its “Black Satin” polish in spring. The limited-edition polish quickly sold out, though fans could find it on eBay, at prices up to $75 and more. It retailed for $18.

” Black Satin’ was a huge success,” said Julie Malizia, cosmetics manager at Saks Fifth Avenue in Beachwood. “It was sold out before we even got it in. Hundreds of people were asking for it. If we had gotten 1,000 bottles in, we could have sold 1,000 bottles.”

But our local Saks had only roughly 70 bottles to sell, in a well-crafted, oft-used ploy by Chanel to create demand through limiting inventory.

And thus, people resorted to knockoffs, versions of the black polish that companies such as OPI, Sally Hansen and Essie were eager to supply, and at prices much more palatable than Chanel’s $18, not to mention much easier to find.

“You can’t really tell the difference between the colors once they’ve dried,” said Bea Coseski, a nail technician at Spa Ostara in Westlake, who applied the five different shades used in the PD photo shoot. “But some people just like the name.”

Regardless of brand allure or simple street chic, black looks as though it will be back for quite some time.

“Dark, short nails are what is in fashion through at least spring,” said Malizia. “Chanel has replaced Black Satin’ with Black Ceramic,’ which has sparkles in it. It sold out as soon as it came in, of course, but we will get more of it.”

Original Plain Dealer article

Oh and for those of you that missed out on Chanel Black Satin and don’t want to settle for it’s wicked stepsister, Noir Ceramic, pick up Zoya Raven. Only $5.50 and pregnancy safe for all you hip mommies-to-be.

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