Archives for category: tutorial
  • First you need to have a good, safe area for stamping. You will make a mess. I like cutting out pieces of cardboard and using that as my stamping area, but I’ve seen some people use paper towels.
  • It’s okay to press kinda hard when transferring the image to your nail, sometimes it works best that way. 
  • You must work QUICKLY. I can’t stress this enough.  You’ll find what speed you need, and it always varies on the polish. 
  • Sometimes they say you should rough up the ends with a emery board file so that it’ll pick up the image better. Personally I don’t see the big deal or purpose in it. The texture still feels the same.
  • ENSURE your nail polish base is dry! You don’t necessarily need a polished base, but if you do, make sure it’s completely dry and can handle being pressed upon on. We don’t want the polish bunching up and sliding, do we?
  • You need lots of patience! It will suck the first few times then when you get it, it’s so easy and fun 🙂 
    • For the first few times it’s good idea to practice stamping over your old manicures, because if it sucks horribly you can just scrap the whole thing, no big deal. 

————————————————————————–

    STEP BY STEP PHOTO TUTORIAL
    • Begin with your work station, have everything ready. What you will need:
      • Stamping plate
      • Stamper/scraper (scraper, you can use an old credit card or ID card, whatever floats your boat, if you don’t like the one Konad or Born Pretty provides)
      • Polish
      • Cotton ball/pad/Q-Tip soaked in acetone
      • Something to go underneath your stuff, so that scraped polish doesn’t mess your table. I use cut out cardboard squares from boxes and what not, and toss them when they get too covered in old polish. Economical! 🙂
    •  Apply polish to the side of your image
      • Some people like to fill it in, but I find it just makes a bigger mess and uses up a lot of unnecessary polish. I like to put a glob on about 1/4 of it. Sometimes it’s a trial and error, figuring out how much polish will cover the whole image plate.
      • You can also manipulate your polish and scraping to cover only certain parts of your image plate and even use several colors at once
    • Scrape the polish over the image, from the inside of the plate to the outside so that the polish ends up on the cardboard/paper towel.
      • I just like doing it this way, sometimes people scrape from the outside to the inside
    • ALWAYS clean up between each stamp.
      • Some people don’t, but I find that the engravings flood and I can’t even really stamp for the second time so it’s pointless. I always swipe over the plate and sometimes the stamper or scraper (if it’s built up too much polish) between every stamp
    •  At this point you must MOVE like LIGHTNING.
      • The polish will begin to dry rapidly
    • In a rolling motion from one direction to the another, use the stamper end to pick up the image
      • Don’t go back and forth
      • Don’t press TOO hard (you will figure out for yourself what the acceptable pressure is) or the image will smear.
    • Quickly line up the stamper to your nail
      • Again, with a rolling motion, stamp on the nail.
    • DON’T:
      • Go back and forth
      • Just slap it on, the image will peel back up
    • It’s okay to press fairly hard, if your nail polish is completely dry, this will help the image transfer better. 
    • Practice with this step! You can stamp on a piece of paper to test out various possible stamping polishes, or your general technique. I recommend this, so you don’t ruin your manicure. Also if you’re a novice stamper, stamp over old manicures right before you plan to take them off, so if you ruin it, no big deal.

     Final result! This kind of sucks, I was going very slowly and as a result some of the dots never transferred properly, but hey, it comes with the territory of making a tutorial 🙂 So you see all that stuff around the cuticles? What do you do with them? Here is my final step.

     Clean up!
    • In this photo I use a Q-Tip. I’m just showing the options available. Myself, I use a brush dipped in acetone. I’ve heard a lot of people say eyeliner brushes are the best but I have yet to try this. 
      • Pointed Q-Tips will work a lot better than this one though. You can see the lint wanting to get everywhere 🙂
      •  

    You will notice I never use Konad Special Polishes. In an upcoming post I will be discussing stamping polishes. 🙂

    • First you need to have a good, safe area for stamping. You will make a mess. I like cutting out pieces of cardboard and using that as my stamping area, but I’ve seen some people use paper towels.
    • It’s okay to press kinda hard when transferring the image to your nail, sometimes it works best that way. 
    • You must work QUICKLY. I can’t stress this enough.  You’ll find what speed you need, and it always varies on the polish. 
    • Sometimes they say you should rough up the ends with a emery board file so that it’ll pick up the image better. Personally I don’t see the big deal or purpose in it. The texture still feels the same.
    • ENSURE your nail polish base is dry! You don’t necessarily need a polished base, but if you do, make sure it’s completely dry and can handle being pressed upon on. We don’t want the polish bunching up and sliding, do we?
    • You need lots of patience! It will suck the first few times then when you get it, it’s so easy and fun 🙂 
      • For the first few times it’s good idea to practice stamping over your old manicures, because if it sucks horribly you can just scrap the whole thing, no big deal. 

    ————————————————————————–

      STEP BY STEP PHOTO TUTORIAL
      • Begin with your work station, have everything ready. What you will need:
        • Stamping plate
        • Stamper/scraper (scraper, you can use an old credit card or ID card, whatever floats your boat, if you don’t like the one Konad or Born Pretty provides)
        • Polish
        • Cotton ball/pad/Q-Tip soaked in acetone
        • Something to go underneath your stuff, so that scraped polish doesn’t mess your table. I use cut out cardboard squares from boxes and what not, and toss them when they get too covered in old polish. Economical! 🙂
      •  Apply polish to the side of your image
        • Some people like to fill it in, but I find it just makes a bigger mess and uses up a lot of unnecessary polish. I like to put a glob on about 1/4 of it. Sometimes it’s a trial and error, figuring out how much polish will cover the whole image plate.
        • You can also manipulate your polish and scraping to cover only certain parts of your image plate and even use several colors at once
      • Scrape the polish over the image, from the inside of the plate to the outside so that the polish ends up on the cardboard/paper towel.
        • I just like doing it this way, sometimes people scrape from the outside to the inside
      • ALWAYS clean up between each stamp.
        • Some people don’t, but I find that the engravings flood and I can’t even really stamp for the second time so it’s pointless. I always swipe over the plate and sometimes the stamper or scraper (if it’s built up too much polish) between every stamp
      •  At this point you must MOVE like LIGHTNING.
        • The polish will begin to dry rapidly
      • In a rolling motion from one direction to the another, use the stamper end to pick up the image
        • Don’t go back and forth
        • Don’t press TOO hard (you will figure out for yourself what the acceptable pressure is) or the image will smear.
      • Quickly line up the stamper to your nail
        • Again, with a rolling motion, stamp on the nail.
      • DON’T:
        • Go back and forth
        • Just slap it on, the image will peel back up
      • It’s okay to press fairly hard, if your nail polish is completely dry, this will help the image transfer better. 
      • Practice with this step! You can stamp on a piece of paper to test out various possible stamping polishes, or your general technique. I recommend this, so you don’t ruin your manicure. Also if you’re a novice stamper, stamp over old manicures right before you plan to take them off, so if you ruin it, no big deal.

       Final result! This kind of sucks, I was going very slowly and as a result some of the dots never transferred properly, but hey, it comes with the territory of making a tutorial 🙂 So you see all that stuff around the cuticles? What do you do with them? Here is my final step.

       Clean up!
      • In this photo I use a Q-Tip. I’m just showing the options available. Myself, I use a brush dipped in acetone. I’ve heard a lot of people say eyeliner brushes are the best but I have yet to try this. 
        • Pointed Q-Tips will work a lot better than this one though. You can see the lint wanting to get everywhere 🙂
        •  

      You will notice I never use Konad Special Polishes. In an upcoming post I will be discussing stamping polishes. 🙂

       Everyone hates removing glitter, right? Especially when it rips the cotton ball to shreds like so: 
       Annoying! If you scrub it off you can even scratch your nail bed, depending on the glitter!

      So get some foil out, cut them up in strips, about an inch by two/three, depending on your nail size. I have nubbins currently so they’re skinny:

       Get a cotton square, or a ball (I’ve used balls before, just cut them up small but I find they soak a crazy amount of acetone up to the point where it’s kind of silly. So I picked up this really luxurious bunch of cotton squares at Harris Teeter, lol) like this:

       With the size of this pad I can get about 30 tiny squares cut so it’s not bad for the money, since it was almost 2 bucks.

       Example of a tiny square. Soak it quickly in 100% acetone and place it over the nail.

       Immediately wrap the foil strip around the nail. We do this because the acetone evaporates immediately and the foil traps the vapors so that the glitter has a chance to soak off.

       I think I probably could communicate with life beyond earth with all this foil on my hands! Leave it on for a minute or so, just use your judgment basically on the amount of glitter involved and the length of your nails. Remove the foil, and swipe the little square outwards…

       Result! All comes off in one, neat sweep! If you have glitter around the cuticles just use the back of the square (The untainted side, that is) and do a quick clean up.

       The downside of this method?

      THIS stays on though! Good thing soap and hot water fixes it.

       Everyone hates removing glitter, right? Especially when it rips the cotton ball to shreds like so: 
       Annoying! If you scrub it off you can even scratch your nail bed, depending on the glitter!

      So get some foil out, cut them up in strips, about an inch by two/three, depending on your nail size. I have nubbins currently so they’re skinny:

       Get a cotton square, or a ball (I’ve used balls before, just cut them up small but I find they soak a crazy amount of acetone up to the point where it’s kind of silly. So I picked up this really luxurious bunch of cotton squares at Harris Teeter, lol) like this:

       With the size of this pad I can get about 30 tiny squares cut so it’s not bad for the money, since it was almost 2 bucks.

       Example of a tiny square. Soak it quickly in 100% acetone and place it over the nail.

       Immediately wrap the foil strip around the nail. We do this because the acetone evaporates immediately and the foil traps the vapors so that the glitter has a chance to soak off.

       I think I probably could communicate with life beyond earth with all this foil on my hands! Leave it on for a minute or so, just use your judgment basically on the amount of glitter involved and the length of your nails. Remove the foil, and swipe the little square outwards…

       Result! All comes off in one, neat sweep! If you have glitter around the cuticles just use the back of the square (The untainted side, that is) and do a quick clean up.

       The downside of this method?

      THIS stays on though! Good thing soap and hot water fixes it.

       So you have a lot of plates, like me? How do you organize them?? I knew immediately from when I got my first BM plates (only 21) that there had to be something done. I hated keeping them in a stack because they got knocked over too easily, if I kept them in a drawer they would just move around when the drawer slid open/close, and I DID NOT enjoy going through all 21 of my BM plates when I was looking for a design. I have to have it all laid out before me. 🙂

       So when I was browsing Target I thought to go to the photo album section, and went straight to the clearance bin. I picked this album up for about a dollar and a few cents.

       See! It’ll do. But one page is too much for a stamping plate. What next?

       Cut them in half!

       Tape down the halves, obviously, so that the plates don’t fall out!

       All neatly in their sleeves! 🙂

       Two ways you can go about this– tape together the sections of each page, so that they don’t flop/you don’t have to turn two pages every side…

       Like this.

       What it would look like if you taped together one page and turned it. Personally, I find both methods have their pros and cons. With one page, you don’t turn as many pages as you would with the sectional/separate pages. However. you have more “grip” on the plates by turning each half individually. The plates tend to try to fall out if you turn the entire page but I have a hand/finger trick to remedy that.

      All in their places, like so! 🙂

      I saw a blogger use a business card folder that kept three plates to a page, and I thought that was very very neat but my method is much more economical, if you would rather to spend your money on polish and plates like I do!! 😛

      What are YOUR ways of storing plates so far?

       So you have a lot of plates, like me? How do you organize them?? I knew immediately from when I got my first BM plates (only 21) that there had to be something done. I hated keeping them in a stack because they got knocked over too easily, if I kept them in a drawer they would just move around when the drawer slid open/close, and I DID NOT enjoy going through all 21 of my BM plates when I was looking for a design. I have to have it all laid out before me. 🙂

       So when I was browsing Target I thought to go to the photo album section, and went straight to the clearance bin. I picked this album up for about a dollar and a few cents.

       See! It’ll do. But one page is too much for a stamping plate. What next?

       Cut them in half!

       Tape down the halves, obviously, so that the plates don’t fall out!

       All neatly in their sleeves! 🙂

       Two ways you can go about this– tape together the sections of each page, so that they don’t flop/you don’t have to turn two pages every side…

       Like this.

       What it would look like if you taped together one page and turned it. Personally, I find both methods have their pros and cons. With one page, you don’t turn as many pages as you would with the sectional/separate pages. However. you have more “grip” on the plates by turning each half individually. The plates tend to try to fall out if you turn the entire page but I have a hand/finger trick to remedy that.

      All in their places, like so! 🙂

      I saw a blogger use a business card folder that kept three plates to a page, and I thought that was very very neat but my method is much more economical, if you would rather to spend your money on polish and plates like I do!! 😛

      What are YOUR ways of storing plates so far?

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