Because I am now obsessed with doing gel manicures at home, I absolutely wanted to try doing a chrome/shimmer look. The thing is nail powders are so pricey - apparently only because some are called "nail powder"!
As I mentioned in another post, I remembered that I have an old (like 7 or 8 years old) shimmer shadow in a deep copper bronze with a tiny touch of gold. I'm not big on using makeup but I hate to throw out pretty things. Plus, this belonged to my late sister.
This color is so gorgeous, right?
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This is a Sally Hansen brand
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I would never be bold enough to wear that color but my sister would. For me, it's a perfect color for chrome nails. And I thought I was such a frugal genius for thinking of this but... the method has been around for a while! See? I'm not the only cheap thrifty gal out here.
Anyway, I learned a couple of things my first time doing this:
- Apparently, powder shadow is the best. I'm not sure what happens with sticks or creams or other formats. I don't have any of those around to test.
- Because I don't like the way heavy glitter polish felt on my nails (without adding a heavy top coat), I personally recommend using a shimmer-not-glitter powder. Mine is a very fine shimmer powder, thank goodness.
- You have to use a base, of course, but you also need to get the powder to stick to your color polish. I did a top coat over the base to apply the eyeshadow and I use a no-wipe top coat so the eyeshadow just slid right off. In the end, I used a color under the powder. Basically, the eyeshadow won't stick to a very slick base. Or at least, it won't hold a lot of the color.
- The color your choose to use as a base for the eyeshadow makes a big difference in the final chrome color effect. You'll see what I mean in a moment.
- By the way, thankfully, the shadow did not leach onto the brush or into the bottle when I applied the top coat. I was worried about that. And, yes, you need to...
- ... finish with a nice top coat. It adds shine, of course, and it seals the eyeshadow from staining things or rubbing off.
- Do wipe down your cuticles, fingers, and all your hand with some alcohol or oil. The eyeshadow - because it is a shimmer - was all over my fingers when I finished.
Okay. For my experiment, I used a bronze-gold eyeshadow. For a base color, I used a medium burgundy - except for on one finger where I used my jet black color.
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with the burgundy base color |
I thought I would prefer the black as a base but, nope, the burgundy base was prettier in my opinion. The black base made the shimmer look much more flat bronze with a green tinge that I don't like at all. The burgundy resulted in a copper bronze that is really pretty and just overall more "chrome-like". The thing is, the base color does come through a little. That's why the black base gave such a different result. (It was hard to get a good photo because I did the black base on my dominant hand. I had to try to get a photo using my left hand and bad lighting!)
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black as a base color on the left finger |
Learning about the base color effect is a good thing because I do have gel polish in shades that, by themselves are too light - or too pink or orange or whatever - for my skin tone. The shimmer shadow I have will be great with those as a base.
I hate my hands because they have always looked old but I love, love, love this chrome polish look on my nails. It's said that wearing perfume and pretty underwear just makes a woman feel more beautiful. I will add having a pretty manicure to that list. And heels. Heels always make me feel pretty.
The main thing I will say about doing a chrome manicure with eyeshadow is that it can be messy. I was prepared. I put down a towel and had plenty of wet wipes and alcohol nearby. But the results are prettier than the photos show. It's well worth the initial mess. I will probably never bother to buy a powder specifically for nails (what kind of ripoff marketing is that?) unless it's cheaper than plain old eyeshadow.
On Amazon, I found lots of shimmer shadows (like this
this 5-color palette) from Wet 'n Wild for around $3.20 (around $0.60 per color) and there are some $0.99 single shimmer pans from that brand. Since I'm using them on my nails and not anywhere on my face, I wouldn't mind
really cheaping out and finding some Dollar Store palettes. So, go wild and chrome up. Maybe one day, I will try using non-shimmer eyeshadow on my nails.
Peace
--Free
** BTW - as old as that eyeshadow is, I was able to track down that it's a Sally Hansen product. There are still some colors on Amazon but I couldn't find this bronze shade. I
did find something that
looks identical. Knowing my sister, she didn't pay more than 4 or 5 bucks for the one she bought!