Create Your Own Nail Art Designs Nail Art Gallery

Getting a manicure done at a salon can be pretty expensive especially if you get your nails done weekly.
You can easily create your own nail art designs at home using your favorite nail polishes and a little bit of creativity.
Here are some tips and tricks to create your own nail art designs.

Remove any traces of nail polish from your nails using acetone free nail polish remover because it is not as damaging for the nail.

Cut your nails and file them in the desired shape.

To prevent peeling nails file them only in one direction. Push your cuticles in using a cuticle

Use a base coat on the nail before you apply the colored nail polish, to protect your nails.

Apply a nail color – this will be your base color – starting from middle of your nail, using smooth uniform strokes, then allow nails to dry.

Take a colored nail polish and a toothpick – you can also use a multi-purpose nail sticks from the drugstore, even a needle, but make sure it’s thick enough.

Apply 3 dots with the nail polish to the nail, get the toothpick and start dragging the color on the nail, creating unique nail art designs. Let them dry and apply a top coat to prevent colors from chipping and

make your nail polish last longer.

You can also create flower nail designs by following these steps:

Take the nail polish that you want the middle of the flower to be and apply a drop on a piece of paper.

Take the toothpick and pick up some color with it and make a small dot wherever you want the flower to be ensuring you leave enough space for the petals.
Take the other color and drop a bit on the paper.
Using the other end of the toothpick take a bit of nail polish on the tip. Apply it next to the other dot.
Take again more nail polish on the toothpick and make another dot next to the last one leaving a tiny space between them. Do the same until you have circled the first dot.
You should now have a tiny flower on your nail. Leave the nail polish flowers to dry and apply a top coat with quick strokes so the flowers won’t smudge.

Once you learn the basics, you can easily create your own nail art with intricate designs and lots of colors – use your imagination and have fun with it!

Create Your Own Nail Art Designs Nail Art Gallery

One of the latest trends in women’s fashion nowadays is wearing nail art. Although it has existed for so long, nail art is now gaining more popularity.

Hand and foot salon businesses are being put up everywhere and most if not all, offer nail art services. What’s the reason why women love having nail art done on their fingernails? Well, just look at these beautiful nail art pictures and designs.

nail art design picture Nail Art Pictures, Design Gallery and Video

This one is red with bells, something you can do on your wedding day.

nail art 2 Nail Art Pictures, Design Gallery and Video

This one has a sort of Christmas feel to it.

nail art 4 Nail Art Pictures, Design Gallery and Video

The next two are some nail art designs which you can use as a pattern and modify for your own nail art creations.

nail art 5 Nail Art Pictures, Design Gallery and Video

nail art 3 Nail Art Pictures, Design Gallery and Video

And lastly, a very elegant nail art design of orchids in black and white.

nail art 1 Nail Art Pictures, Design Gallery and Video

Beautyfull Nail


Most nail salons see a steady parade of business. Nails get cut and filed, feet soak in tubs, cuticles get pushed back and trimmed, calluses get buffed. And while the majority of nail salon visits won’t send you on your way with anything other than an excellent manicure and pedicure, customers — and salon workers — are at risk of spreading disease.

How can a desire for well-groomed nails lead you straight to the doctor’s office? All that buffing, clipping and trimming means that it’s not uncommon for hands and feet to get nicked and cut. And wherever you have open wounds and a lot of skin-to-skin and skin-to-surface contact, you have a very good chance of picking up some gross bacteria or viruses.

So what are the risks of a pampering footbath? We’ve got five nasty bugs to look out for.

A spa treatment is supposed to make you feel like a princess, so you don’t want to go home looking more like the frog the princess kissed instead.


Beware bacteria! This nasty bug might give you a good reason not to shave your legs. You can get Mycobacterium fortuitum from foot baths — and the risk is greatly increased when a soak is preceded by leg shaving.

What does an M. fortuitum infection consist of? Large boils on the toe, foot or leg. These boils may be surrounded by smaller bumps. Sometimes they heal on their own, but they can linger and even turn into open sores. M. fortuitum boils can be lanced by a medical professional and treated with extremely potent antibiotics, but unfortunately, these boils and sores can cause heavy scarring.

To avoid getting the bug, pay attention to any regional reports of M. fortuitum outbreaks. Take your own nail tools to the salon for them to use during your appointment. And don’t be afraid to ask the salon owner about the establishment’s cleaning procedures. After all, you want to treat yourself, but not to a bug like M. fortuitum.

2. MRSA

Another good reason to make sure your nail technician changes his or her gloves between customers: a superbug called MRSA.

If you’ve paid attention to the news in recent years, you’ve likely noticed an uptick in stories about a type of staph infection called methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus. MRSA infections can lead to severe scarring, amputation and even death — and it’s resistant to antibiotics.

Though not common, MRSA is known to be spread at nail salons, leading to infections on hands and beneath fingernails. Symptoms usually appear within 24 hours — you’ll likely experience pain in your hands and be unable to bend or use your fingers with any degree of comfort. The swollen, red skin around the infected area will crack open and ooze pus. It’s hard to miss.

MRSA can be spread through the sharing of unsanitized nail files or other nail implements. These implements should be soaked in a disinfecting solution for a minimum of 10 minutes, then treated with a sterilizing agent. Foot baths should be vigorously cleaned and sanitized between clients.

3. Swine Flu

Time to reschedule.HPV isn’t the only virus you can pick up at the spa. The H1N1 virus (more commonly — and misleadingly — known as the swine flu) makes an appearance as well.

H1N1 is a highly contagious strain of the flu virus. One big reason for this is that most people have no immunity to it, because it’s new. It spreads just like the “regular” flu virus — someone infected with it coughs, sneezes or touches their mouth and then makes contact with another person or a surface someone else will touch.

The virus can survive outside the body for up to eight hours, meaning that an infected customer at a salon can unknowingly booby-trap the establishment with the virus. With all the hand-to-hand contact that occurs in a salon, it’s not difficult to understand why swine flu could easily spread between employees and customers.

So how can you avoid it? Ideally, salon workers wear protective disposable gloves for each client and change and gloves (with a hand washing for good measure) between appointments. All instruments should be treated with chemical germicides.

And if a salon employee is exhibiting flu symptoms, reschedule your appointment. Likewise, if you’re infected with H1N1 (or show any flulike symptoms at all, even without diagnosis), cancel that appointment, no matter how much attention your nails need.

4. Warts
One thing available at nail salons that’s not posted on any service menu is a contagious skin disease. With all the hands and feet passing through a salon each day, the odds are solid that some of those appendages have warts on them.

Warts are caused by a contagious virus called human papillomavirus (HPV). There are many different strains of the virus (such as the type that can cause cervical cancer), but only a few different kinds spur the overproduction of skin cells that results in warts.

Warts spread through person-to-person contact when HPV makes contact with a break in the skin. Hands play host to both common warts and palmer warts. The tops of feet may also have common warts, while the bottoms can have plantar warts, which grow inward due to constant pressure between the foot and the ground. All of these are contagious.

Warts can be spread if a salon worker uses the same pumice stone for different clients. Most salons offer new pumice stones, and you can always bring your own to lower the risk of getting warts. You should also frequent salons where employees wear plastic gloves that they change between appointments.

5. Athlete’s Foot
Athlete’s foot isn’t just for athletes.Despite its name, athlete’s foot affects people regardless of their athletic prowess. It’s the common name for tinea pedis, a fungal infection that requires a moist, confined environment to take root and spread.

Unfortunately, the pedicure baths of a salon provide a breeding ground. Let’s face it: Lots of feet get put into that tub, and not all of those feet are clean. If a spa doesn’t regularly clean its foot tubs between each client, the odds of leaving the spa with a fungal infection you didn’t walk in with increase. Also, fungus isn’t so easily removed from the surfaces it grows on, so a light cleaning may not rid a tub of its presence. Frequent use of an anti-fungal cleaning agent is the best way to prevent spa clients from getting athlete’s foot from a foot tub. On the other hand, if your feet are itching like crazy and you haven’t changed your socks in weeks, you should steer clear of spas or any activity that could potentially spread the fungus to others.

A spa treatment is supposed to make you feel like a princess, so you don’t want to go home looking more like the frog the princess kissed instead.