Auf Wiedersehen, Good night, Peace Out!
Sadly, Maggie’s need for balance in her life means saying goodbye to her Maggie Rants blog.
Y'all are killin’ me! LED lamps use a different light-emitting technology (light emitting diodes); they DO NOT emit a different type of light. The "old" lamps use fluorescent light bulbs. I totally understand why no one wants

Y'all are killin’ me!
LED lamps use a different light-emitting technology (light emitting diodes); they DO NOT emit a different type of light.
The "old" lamps use fluorescent light bulbs. I totally understand why no one wants to bother with a ginormous word like "fluorescent," but by failing to properly differentiate between the type of bulbs and using "LED" versus "UV" in our terminology, we risk getting lazy in our own understanding of these things, as well as spreading ignorance and misunderstanding among our clients and the general public.
If we continue to refer to fluorescent lamps as "UV" and not use "UV" when talking about LED lamps, people will get the impression that LED lamps do not emit ultraviolet light. This will compound the problems associated with the already-existing paranoia concerning UV light. People will start thinking that LED lamps don't use UV light, and that will include a lot of nail techs out there in the world who will then tell their clients they use "LED light instead of UV" and then people will start thinking there's no UV light in LED lamps ... until eventually someone gets sued!
There are so many people in this business who take proper terminology so seriously, I don't understand why so many of these same people insist on failing to apply that proper terminology here?
There are plenty of differences between LED lamps and fluorescent lamps, but ultimately, the products we use these lamps for are cured using ultraviolet light — if LED lamps didn't emit light in the UV spectrum, they wouldn't work!
Remember: different light bulbs, not different light!
Sadly, Maggie’s need for balance in her life means saying goodbye to her Maggie Rants blog.
Maggie recalls the time she tried to figure out how to dispose of her salon chemicals.
With a vacation approaching, Maggie can’t wait to put some distance between herself and the drama of the salon.
Maggie doesn’t hesitate to confront clients about past sins.
How sick is too sick for a nail appointment?
Maggie is fed up with clients who won’t get off the phone.
Maggie needs to remind herself that she has options.
Maggie is trading in one writing genre for another.
Maggie knows too much about sanitation to get excited about a strange Jacuzzi tub.
Maggie is no longer certain nails are in her long-term future.
Maggie is learning about the downside of success — scheduling is a nightmare.
Maggie contemplates the limits of her charitable impulses.
Maggie is not too keen on clients bringing in their own nail supplies.
Just because Maggie isn’t with a client doesn’t mean she’s not working.
Twenty-two years of doing nails takes a toll on the hands.
Maggie doesn’t want her product reps dropping by.
Maggie enjoys other people’s drama — up to a point.