What To Do When You Don’t Love Your Manicure

Photo of lavender and yellow nail polish bottles spilled on art drawing by Maria Lupan on Unsplash

Photo of lavender and yellow nail polish bottles spilled on art drawing by Maria Lupan on Unsplash

Updated 2021.09.08. What do you do when you dislike your manicure? Nail polish is meant to bring joy. When it doesn’t, it’s time to solve this problem - 

When you are finished manicuring your nails at home, the first thing you want to do is gaze at them and behold their beauty. 

The true point of a manicure, or a pedicure for that matter, is that you’ll feel joy when you look at your nails, and if other people do too, that’s just an added plus.

First and foremost, painted nails are meant to bring happiness to you, if they can bring happiness to the world, then all the better.

Usually, happiness and delight is the outcome of most manicures you will create.

However, there are times when the color idea you had in your mind doesn’t exactly match your mood, or what you expected you might feel, when looking at it. 

Sometimes you really do need to find out what manicured nails look and feel prettiest on you by trying out different shades and comparing them. 

There’s no need to feel guilty about not loving a finished product of art, as long as you enjoyed the process.

There's also no reason to feel guilty for not loving a specific bottle of color because everything has its season. 

Because the application of color happens at the end of your manicure, and the most common reason for disliking your manicure is due to the color, the easiest way to fix a manicure you don’t love is to remove your color and do a color change.

Vertical photo of hand on white background surrounded by colored nail polish bottles by Kristina Paukshtite from Pexels

Vertical photo of hand on white background surrounded by colored nail polish bottles by Kristina Paukshtite from Pexels

A color change is the easiest way to get back to being in love with your manicure.

A color change will require you to remove the base and the top coat, use some nail polish remover, and take up a bit of time (between 10-30 minutes) and product, but know that nothing is ever wasted on the road to manicure happiness. 

The color you didn’t love ultimately teaches you a bit about what you do love instead, and why. 

Sometimes color re-dos lead to even prettier manicures and pedicures than the one you began with, so you may be even happier after you do it.

If you don’t love your manicured nails or toes, and you did your nails yourself, and you have time, simply change the color.

Take off your existing polish with nail polish remover, reapply your base coat, color coat and top coat. Let it all dry in between and you’re done.

If you don’t have time for a full color change, still remove your current color, and oil your nails and cuticle, or apply a simple quick dry top coat for shine, committing to redo the color later when you do have time. 

Bare, natural nails are better than looking at something that will make you frown all day.

In the case you went to the salon for the manicure or pedicure, simply tell the technician that you don’t like the shade, and ask if they can do a color change. 

Since their goal is your satisfaction, usually the answer is yes.

An additional option to consider after a color change, is to add a sheer topper, or a gradient glitter to the tips. Sometimes adding a contrasting element to a shade, can make it more appealing to the eye. It also gives you reason to play with nail colors for a minute.

Vertical photo of drawing of girl in blue on stool surrounded by spilled nail polish bottles by Maria Lupan on Unsplash

Vertical photo of drawing of girl in blue on stool surrounded by spilled nail polish bottles by Maria Lupan on Unsplash

What do you do with the nail polish color you don’t love?

If you own the nail color that is part of the manicure or pedicure you are not loving, don’t throw it away right away, because it simply may not be working for you that day.

Maybe it will work for your mood when the seasons change or when you’re wearing another outfit.

Give it a few more tries on other days.

To end, color changing is the fastest way to love your manicure again, or as a second option, add a sheer topper or glitter overlay, to see if it changes your mind.

If you still don’t like it after 3 tries, offer it to someone you know likes polish or toss it

What doesn’t work for you today, may be just the thing someone else needs and it’s okay to accept that. Nail colors can be great things to trade with friends or family members who also love nail design as a hobby.

While a sheer topper can sometimes save a color, there is often just a fraction of a chance that you will change your first impressions of the manicure you didn’t like over time, so waiting to see if you like it, is like continuing to eat a food that you find distasteful.

If you aren’t enjoying it, why keep eating it?

This is why switching out the color right away is the best suggested solution for not loving your manicure.

Life is too short to not have a manicure you love, after spending both time and money attempting to get there. 

Here’s to more days of nail happiness,

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Photo of lavender and yellow nail polish bottles spilled on art drawing by Maria Lupan on Unsplash with text overlay What To Do When You Don’t Love Your Manicure

Photo of lavender and yellow nail polish bottles spilled on art drawing by Maria Lupan on Unsplash with text overlay What To Do When You Don’t Love Your Manicure

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