Read the transcript of the lecture
Hey, guys.
Well, welcome to this course.
We're talking about a renewed Russian manicure, which means we're gonna make a manicure with fresers.
As you can see, I've had a lot of fresers, and I don't even have all the very, very many fresers to test in my career, so I've been dealing with artificial nails for about 13 years, and during that time, fortunately, I've been able to test a lot of frasers, and I'd like to give you a little help, a little guidance on what's worth using, but it's also very different, so that what I'm going to show you now, what I'm going to work with, what kind of fresers, doesn't mean that it's carved in stone, and that's the only way I can make a good manicure, it's not, and I think you're going to watch a similar video from a bunch of instructors, you're going to work with everyone else, maybe with other techniques, or you'll obviously come out with new frezers, so everyone's trying to apply the new ones.
So I'm just gonna give you an example of what worked for me and what I like.
Before we start making a manicure in person, I would like to make it clear to everyone that it is clear what it means to have a Russian manicure or a combined manicure.
For many of you, they don't even know exactly what it means or what the difference is between them.
First of all, the Russian manicure means that we make the manicure with only and exclusively fresers, and we get that, I say, wow effect, when we take a macro photograph of, say, a gelac, and we see that the gap between the rear skin fold and the gel polish color is not visible at all, in fact, we almost see it, and almost that is actually happening.
The color is inside the skin.
This means that, depending on the growth of the nails, it does not seem to grow for a week and a half, so you give the guest an extra one for saying that he will definitely come to you, because he comes to you, say, every two or three weeks, and almost barely visible growth, does not feel unneeded, etc., etc.
So it's a very good hospitality technique, I think, because there are many times that I've heard, for example, I've heard it, I've been told directly, thank God not on my fingernails, that because of the inappropriate manicure and gel polish, there was, say, a millimeter gap between the color and the skin, and the guest said that the nailed one was working on purpose so that he had to go back sooner.
So that's what happens here.
So the point is, in fact, to get a very, very precise result, a non-violent color uprising and a very nice leather preparation.
We're talking about a combined manicure when all this includes the use of scissors, and I'm still listing the use of skin lifters.
When this whole Russian manicure thing started, they didn't even use a skin pusher, but with the help of a similar frezer, or with such a conical, but slammed end, or a completely cylinder-shaped frezer, they pushed up the skin, it wasn't really so much a push-up, but they raised the skin, the sticky parts of the skin, and then it was kind of like pushing it up, but I don't think it was such a good technique, and it actually triggered the use of the skin pusher, and I don't like that, but I'm actually just saying this because you know that it's called a combined manicure when it's involved in the use of scisscissors and skin pushers.
Since this is a renewed Russian manicure course, I try to avoid the use of scissors to avoid mixing the two techniques, but it is not forbidden to use them at all, so if I feel that it is more appropriate or faster to cut off a tiny skin with scissors, let's say, because I see that it is still there somewhere, as I go back with three frezers and refine the skin there, then I will obviously cut it, too, so that it is not forbidden, but it does not belong to the technique.
Okay, the fresers we're gonna use aren't gonna be that much, by the way.
First of all, in order to complete education, I will grate this reinforced gelac off my nails, prepare the manicure together, and I will also make a reinforced, uniform gelac for my nails, because this whole Russian manicure is based not only on the manicure, but also on the fact that the gel polish itself should be prepared nicely.
So we're gonna use a material-picking head, I'm gonna use a carbide head, who may not be experienced, or very afraid of such carbide-corrosive heads, I'm gonna recommend that you choose a more subtle freezer, and I'm gonna show you what kind of freszer we're using right now, for example, just show you another example of how we can see that our fraser is more subtle, it's another brand, so here the markings are not sure if the color tags are the same fortitude, so you're gonna have to look at it, look at it, read about the size of the particular webshop or catalog, but you can see that it's much smaller, so it's probably less or smaller, so it's gonna be able to scrape off the surface of the nail or the gel pad, so it's a weaker frezer, so you can obviously switch it to such a very powerful frezer.
However, we also have to realize that the weaker we use, the more time it takes to remove a quantity of material, and since I think most of it already works with nailed, reinforced gel technology, there are so many materials in that circle that we can safely work with a carbide fresert, and then we are fast, and it doesn't burden our hands too much.
Okay, so we're gonna need a material extraction frezer.
I use the fresers of the tanner flower, he has his products from a webshop or his webshop.
Pretty much all he does is deal with fresers and metal tools, he's got a few more brushes, but you'll find these fresers.
It's called a green cylinder, but you're gonna find it pretty clear from the pictures I think.
And then I just want to show you this as a wake-up call, it's very, very good, I've never seen anything like it.
It's also a material removal frezer, you can see that it's one of those rather mart carbide frezeres, which is that it's hard to remove the color on the edge of the grown-up area, or it's hard to get to the side lines here, so let's say use this frezer.
It's called a red conical finisher, so it's a red conical finisher.
Well, I'm not always gonna say that long name, so I'm telling you that we're gonna do something with this shed if we're gonna do something about it, so these two fresers are the ones I can use fast, because they're really good at taking the material when they remove a gelac, but we're gonna have a lot of fresers, so they're not just the good ones, so you can use a different kind of fresers.
I've worked with a lot of fresers in my life, like one of my favorites, this Celeb Nails' conical milling head, it's even more zoral than the other.
It's really a way to eat the stuff, it's the strongest frenchman I've ever had in my life.
I love it, by the way.
You can use the Volcano fresers of Pearl Nails, for example, it's a little more subtle.
I also think the Cross Cut fresers are very good for Pearl Nails.
It's a stronger one, I've shown you the red mark before, it's the weaker one.
I've got one of these, I don't know if it's available at Crystal Nails, I've had it for quite some time.
For example, it's the same category as...
I'd like to correct myself, it's not the strongest, it's my strongest fresher, it's just that I don't use it anymore, because I only use it for porcelain, because it's really brutal.
So for a gel polish, that's the limit I don't cross anymore, but I'm telling you, there's a lot of fresers that can be used, you actually have to try and test what's best for you, and, obviously, if you've done such an education, it's worth listening to the instructor, and if something works for him, then it's probably gonna work for you, too, because it's already been tested.
Okay, so these two fresers are gonna be the extractor fresers.
And let's see, we're not gonna use that much extra fresers for the Russian manicure, by the way.
The very first of these Russian manicure videos, well, they used, like, seven fresers, even I think that's probably how I first learned in an education.
Well, it's a hell of a lot of time, and I think it's overloading the skin, so that's also the category that looks really good in the photo, but that if you emulate the guest like this, or if it comes back densely every two weeks, it's going to overload the skin so much that, on the one hand, it can become sensitive to an allergic reaction or irritation, it's going to be more sensitive to this part of the skin, and it's going to produce a lot more skin by protecting our own body, and it's always gonna train itself to be this thick, because it's trying to defend itself, because the skin is too thinned, isn't it? So I don't think it's a healthy category anymore, so that's why I've named this new Russian manicure training, so that I can sort of mark that I don't want to show you the classic Russian manicure because I don't agree with it, and on the other hand, it doesn't really fit in the nails' time to do one of those manicures.
Now, we're gonna need a freezer from here, so I'm gonna put this right here.
We're gonna have one of these fresers, so I'm gonna try to put it down in order to get it fixed.
So these are the four fresers we're gonna use for manicure.
It's called Half Flame, 023 Half Flame.
It's called a 014 Needle.
It's called, it's gonna be the easiest thing to do, the 025 cylinder, and then they're all in the last row, and it's always gonna be the sphere frezer for us to replace the scissors, so you can remove the loose skin.
I used the biggest one, there are several sizes, but I think it's the biggest one, or it's the most comfortable one to remove the skin.
This medium-sized may still be considered, say a little more than new, it may be more comfortable to work with, but obviously, it is not certain that everyone will take both strengths from both or three sizes, so buying six fresers from only sphere fresers is probably not very much needed, but I don't think it is necessary, so I'm going to use the largest red-marked sphere fressure, and the size is 3, 4 and 5 millimeters, and this is the largest, so this is the 5 millimeter red sphere freser.
Okay, so these are gonna be the fresers I'm gonna use.
We'll definitely use it in focus, but I'll draw for you, see if you can get a better read on how to use it.
And here I would like to highlight how important it is to have good scissors.
I use Tom Melinda's scissors.
It worked for me, by the way, for the tanner's flower from which the fresers are available, you can order scissors from there, too, which is very, very recommended, so it would certainly require some super sharp, super-thin scissors, and unfortunately, I couldn't find it in that capacity for one of these general art nail brands, so I was forced to get a good pair of scissors on these side roads, so I recommend this with all my heart.
It's terrific, so you guys can work really nicely on this, and what's really important is that we have a good leather pick-up scraper, and then maybe I can tell you here that if you want a cheaper category, then a manicure leather pick-up scraper might come up.
You see, there's a stairwell here, it's definitely a positive one, so it would be necessary, but if I put the two next to each other, you can see that the whole design of this larger skin scraper is so thinner, it fits better with the skin anyway.
So it's a fact, and it's true, that this stairwell scraper of a tanner flower is better than one of those, but if there's nothing else, then it can be done.
What doesn't come up at all, those generally available skin pickup scrapers, I can say one of those things, which, in fact, doesn't have any steps at all.
It's pretty big for me, because otherwise I don't use it for manicure at all, but it's not good at all, but it's a little too big for a little nail, so you can't fit into the skin, you can't push it up properly, and instead of pushing the skin up and forming a gap between the skin and the nails, instead of pushing the dry skin under the back skin fold, from which you should get the dry skin, so I don't recommend it at all, so it's better if we don't use anything instead, because it's horrible, so you're either a stairder scraper, like a tanner flower, or if you don't have any, you'd need a manicure skin pusher.
Well, so much for the tools, it was a very important part, and I thought it was because obviously it doesn't matter what tools you're working with.
You also need to know that these can be replaced, so you can replace the orb freezer with scissors and then you can have a combined manicure.
This fresert can't be replaced with so many things, with a similar kind of fresher.
I'll give you an example.
I've got an almost identical, but not cylinder shaped, but an extension of the cylinder, which is Crystal Nails, which is also good for lifting the skin, so I've tried it with this.
This also worked perfectly, and this is how we will do the matte of the natural nail plate and remove the skin from the nail plate first, and for example, this can be replaced with a lot of things, such a classic cone shape narrows down at the base, for example, there is a longer version of it, which can also be good.
For example, you can use a little bit of a tiny conical freezer, like this one with Celeb Nails, this one, if I remember correctly, is Crystal Nails.
So you can see that these are almost identical.
Now, these can be changed calmly, so it's absolutely up to you what falls on your hands or what you have, or you have to pay attention to your strength alone, because if this last frezer, for example, is pretty grainy, so this diamond dust is strong enough on him, so he's gonna do the matting harder, so you're gonna have to keep an eye on them.
And there's this very tiny, thin fresher, isn't there? This can be replaced by one of these, for example, you can see that he has a little bit of this belly, but it's also very thin, so it's also easy to work with, it's also Crystal Nails frezer.
I have one of these, it's very similar to the first one, it's Crystal Nails, you can see that it's a longer version of it, obviously it'll be able to clean the side lines.
Okay, so I'm actually hoping that everyone in their drawers will find a freezer that they can use, and if they can't, then it's obviously necessary to invest in fresers, and then learn this technique.
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