
TIP OF THE WEEK #5 by Vicki Peters
DISCLAIMER
Any products mentioned in the "Tip Of The Week by Vicki Peters"
is not an
endorsement of any kind.
TIP OF THE WEEK #5 - FILING TECHNIQUES
As a request from Jill Johnson
and an e mail to the list from Janie Robles
last week I though that a tip on filing techniques was in order.
What I am
going to do is describe my filing system and under no means is
it the end all
system for everyone. I am just sharing mine - which works for
me. Everyone
needs a filing system or a system for anything if you think about
it. A
filing system can save you time and keep you focused - which will
give you
better results.
A story first.
My sister Diane had her license for a few months when I visited
and she did
my nails for me. After applying the acrylic she went to file them
and pulled
out four black files. She spent 15 minutes filing in no special
order
picking up one file after another and switching back and forth
from nail to
nail. She was making me nuts and not getting the job done. I took
all four
files away from her and asked her to identify the grit on each
one as to
which was coarser. She did not know. What she was doing was flipping
back
and forth between a 100 and 180 files sometimes using the 180
first then the
100! She would file one nail, then move on to the next and then
go back
again. She had no system. So I took the 100 grit file and told
her to file
all ten nails, then I gave her the 180 and told her to do the
same thing. She
saved time and was much more effective with a system she was now
developing.
Vicki's filing system:
This is for the applied acrylic - not the prep work before the
application.
That I will address another time.
AFTER THE ACRYLIC IS APPLIED
I use a 100 grit file. I like the larger thinly cushioned files
that are
square ended.
I like these files because I do not like files that are too cushioned
or
bend. I cannot get a clean line from a file that bends. However
for the
finish a cushioned file will hug the nail better. I also like
a large board
because I can get more surface contact, which allows me less filing
time.
Another thing I do which may
be wasted time and acrylic to some but works for
me is I build every nail square even if I intend to make it round.
I get
straighter edges in my final nail this way.
STEP 1 - Parameter
Just like in a haircut you must file a guideline. Take your 100
grit and
file the tips of the nails all straight and the same length. Hold
your file
straight up, not at an angle in which will make the tip inverted
or at angle
under that will undercut the corners off. Flat to the tip's edge.
STEP 2 - Measure the nails
Nail to nail, cuticle to tip - forget about the smile lines not
lining up -
that is another tip of the week! The thumbs and pinkies should
be in
proportion and the index, middle and ring nails should be the
same length.
View the nails from the top - do not turn them so the hand is
pointing up and
do not turn them around and measure the size of the free edge
that you can
see over the tip of the finger - this will sure mess your length
up because
not all nails are on the fingertips at the same exact place.
Measure now at this step and you won't need to worry about it later.
STEP 3 - File the sides
Viewing the nails from the top with the file straight up and down
- holding
the file straight - not at an angle - file the side shapes of
all ten nails.
STEP 4 - File the undersides.
Turn the nail so you are viewing the underside of the edge of
the nail in a
nail profile position - where it leaves the groove wall and becomes
the free
edge extension.
With the file tucked into the groove wall and with the file touching
the
whole edge of the underside of the nail where is may have an overhang,
file
the underside edge of the extension. File both sides of the nail
so now you
should have all clean edges.
NO FLIPPING THE FILE!
Most techs try to achieve the last two steps in one stroke and
wind up
flipping the file around as they file. This does not make a straight
sidewall
edge and ruins the corners. So if you flip the file try using
my two steps
for filing the sides. Using a file that bends too much by applying
too much
pressure trying to get a straight edge will also be difficult
to achieve a
straight line.
STEP 5 - Making round nails
At this point if you want to round the nails take your file and
press it flat
- up to the tips' edge, then angle the file so is slips slightly
underneath
the edges allowing you to remove the underneath corners of the
tip.
Then after taking the corners
off shaping the nail round will be easier and
more consistent.
STEP 6 - Shaping the top
surface
Now with your 100 grit file go over the surface of all ten nails.
I stay away
from the cuticle and focus on lower =BE of the nail down to the
tip.
STEP 7 - The cuticle
Now I would do all ten cuticles.
STEP 8 - The "V"
bit
I then take my Kupa "V" bit - yes named after me! And
refine the cuticles.
The "V" bit is a medium carbide cone with the tip cut
off so it is small and
flat so it fits right into the cuticle area. I view the nails
from a profile=
so if there is a "humpage" at the cuticle I can remove
it and have a nice
clean blend of acrylic down to the natural nail.
STEP 9 - 180 grit file
Now I repeat all the steps I did with the 100 grit file with my
180 file to
refine what I have already done. This makes for a consistent shape.
Sometimes if I have made really
smooth nails I use a 150 file for both steps
eliminating some time and achieving the same results. I don't
always make
smooth nails though!
SECRET TIP - one thing you need to do in between
grit changes is to remove
the dust left behind by the coarser file. If you try to use a
180 to smooth
the nails after using a 100 grit you will file into the nail the
100 grit
particles left behind - gaining no ground at all. Sop don't forget
to
remove the grit dust in between switching files
STEP 10 - The white block
Again, dust the nails and use the coarse side of a white block,
or your
favorite block. Make sure you are graduating grits - some blocks
can be
coarser than you think. Make sure you go over the entire surface
smoothing
the nails completely. Go underneath and smooth the edges too -
without
re-shaping the edges. Use a good amount of pressure when doing
this.
STEP 11 - The white block
again with cuticle oil
Dust the nails again and apply cuticle oil and rub into the cuticles.
Most
oils you would use for buffing will be mineral oil based cuticle
oil, perfect
for buffing, but will not penetrate the cuticles as well as some
other
natural ingredient cuticle oils. Another words cheap oil is better.
With the softer side of the
white block buff the nails again to graduate the
surface smoothness. Yes you will ruin the buffer but they are
super cheap
when purchased in bulk.
STEP 12 - Chamois or 3
way buffers
Wipe the nails clean with a dry cloth or towel, you want to remove
the excess
oil without removing it completely. Use a three-way to get a high
shine or a
chamois buffer.
I use two chamois buffers.
Now don't give me grief about sanitation here - if
you want to use a clean one wash them in the dishwasher or buy
one per
client. I use a chamois with Lysa Comfort's (EZ Flow) buffing
cream on all
ten nails. Use a good amount of pressure without heating the nails
up - so
keep an eye on that. Then I use a clean chamois with less pressure
to bring
the shine up even higher.
If you graduate your grits
properly, use the right files and make sure each
file covers the entire nail when filing you should be able to
high shine a
nail without a three-way buffer.
Vicki
DISCLAIMER
Any products mentioned in the "Tip Of The Week by Vicki Peters"
is not an
endorsement of any kind.