It could be hours later that you are leaving the marks on the paper, but realistically your nail polish may be dry to the light touch by then but still not totally cured. It can take up to 24 hours for all the layers of the coats to bond together and harden properly. As well, nail polish is only a physical coating, and it will wear off or rub off on anything it comes into contact with. Paper is especially bad because it is a fibrous material, and is very drying to skin. I would keep experimenting with top coats, and consult a nail salon to see which brands they use that they feel have the best reputation for wear and durability.Nail polish marks on paper?
that happens to me alot,
its just because nailpolish doesnt offically dry for a few hours, and it can still rub off
try painting them after school or before dinner and it should be fine
This is a tough one. Every manufacturer uses a slightly different process with nail enamels, resulting in varying levels of wear resistance. Some of the entry-level brands (New York Color, Wet'n'Wild, %26amp;c.) have a poor track record for wear.
I am already aware of at least two manufacturers addressing problems similar to yours of leaving color traces where they ought not be: Revlon, which introduced the ColorStay nail finishing system a few years back (a two-step system with a high-adhesion color layer and acrylic top coat), and Sally Hansen Division, Del Laboratories, who introduced the Hard As Nails Hard As Wraps enamel collection last year and already have customer testimonials to this system's effectiveness. I cannot rule out other companies working on solutions to this wear problem.
the only thing that helps me is when i get my nails done at the nail salons its not as bad.. im sure its like topcoat or gloss.
was it still wet when you worked with the papers? because that could be the problem. or if you put on too many layers of color on the nail, it gets too thick and rubs off. stick to 1-2 coats of color and 1 topcoat.
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