Nailympics
Hello everyone!After I had finished back-to-back competitions in Orlando and then in Las Vegas I thought I was done competing for the year, but then I heard about the Nailympics in Long beach California at the
I’ve been to hundreds of competitions and seen thousands of sets of competition nails, and one of the simplest mistakes I see competitors make (even seasoned ones) is to not use the file grits properly. You see,

I’ve been to hundreds of competitions and seen thousands of sets of competition nails, and one of the simplest mistakes I see competitors make (even seasoned ones) is to not use the file grits properly.
You see, acrylic is a form of plastic and we all know that plastics can be made in any shape or form with any texture or finish. That is why we (the nail industry) have an almost unlimited amount of abrasives (files and buffers) in probably 20 different grits and at least five different mediums: metal, glass, paper, cloth, and mylar, which is another plastic. And there may even be more, but I haven’t researched all of that yet, so I’ll go with what I know. And the higher the number, the finer the grit. 100 grit = coarse, 3000 grit = high shine.
All artificial nail enhancements are one form or another of plastic, and all can be brought to a super shiny surface through different file grits with the exception of the gels, which are shiny in their own right. But that’s a different story altogether.
So back to the grits, when the grits are used properly, it is very easy to achieve a super high shine without wrecking your shoulder or elbow. The key is to use the grits in succession. Each file or buffer will put scratches in the surface of the nail and to remove the scratches you need to use the next highest grit.
So if you start filing the nail with a 180-grit file, your next file must be a higher grit, say a 220. Then a 280 and so on into the buffers. Buffers are finer grits, but still in the abrasives family, like 400-600 grit. Then it moves into the high shiners like 1000-3000 grit. But you must be sure that you go over the entire surface of the nail every time you change grits. Which is another reason to use a filing “technique,” but that is another lesson.
So, in conclusion, when you learn the succession of the file grits and learn to use them all, your filing and finishing will be easy peasy and your finished nail will be so shiny it will seem as though you are looking in a mirror.
Peace
— Lynn
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