Nails are the editorial of the hand.
Nails, organised the way the rest of the wardrobe is organised — by technique, by chemistry, by maintenance, by register, by long-view care, and by the honest maths of where to spend the time. Six dimensions, written by a beauty director who treats the hand like a small editorial spread and refuses to pretend nails are decoration. The point of this chapter is not to lacquer harder. It is to wear the hand on purpose, in front of the people you spend your day with.
The six dimensions of the nails chapter
Manicure
At-home manicure technique, the steps that matter, the steps the salon does for you, and the order of operations — file, push, base, colour, top, oil — that separates a finish lasting a full week from one that chips on day two. The page covers shaping (square, oval, almond, the new soft-square), prep (the buffing question, the dehydrator question, the alcohol wipe), the cap-the-edge rule for both base and top coats, the alcohol-evaporation window, and the oil step at the end that closes the manicure. Six walkthroughs. Nine ordered steps. The reason a clean lacquer at home regularly outlasts a rushed gel in a chair. Read it at /en/nails/manicure/.
Gel vs Polish
The chemistry, longevity, removal cost, and when each is the right call. Gel is a polymer cured by UV light, sitting in a layer on the plate; lacquer is a solvent-based film that cures by evaporation. The page lays out the honest trade-offs of each and then opens up the formats most readers do not know exist — extended-wear hybrids that wear longer than lacquer without UV, dip systems with their own set of removal trade-offs, builder gels that sit between manicure and extension. Five formats. One safe-removal protocol. The accounting of what each format costs the nail plate and what it gives you in exchange. Read it at /en/nails/gel-vs-polish/.
Strengthening
What brittle, peeling, and ridged nails actually need. Hydration before keratin, almost always, because most brittle nails are dehydrated rather than under-protein. The page covers the protein-and-moisture balance that separates a strengthening regimen that works from one that hardens nails into glass; the role of biotin (smaller than the supplement aisle pretends, with the strongest evidence reserved for clinically deficient diets); the strengthener formats worth using; and the six-week reset for nails that have been stressed by removal, weather, or a long stretch of gel. The single highest-leverage habit is oil. The single most overrated product is the most expensive strengthener on the shelf. Read it at /en/nails/strengthening/.
Nail Art
Minimal-to-maximal, with a working skill ladder. From single-tone perfection to French to negative space to chrome to freehand line work, each rung explained on the basis of what the hand and the eye actually have to do. The page also handles the editorial register that keeps decoration from drifting into costume — what reads as adult, what reads as juvenile, what reads as photographic only and falls apart on a real hand under a real conference-room light. Seven core looks, an honest skill ladder, and one rule the chapter holds: one move per manicure. The hand is a spread, not a scrapbook. Read it at /en/nails/nail-art/.
Cuticle Care
Push, never cut. The oil routine that quietly does the heavy lifting, the anatomical difference between cuticle and eponychium (and why it matters when a cuticle is being trimmed by someone holding a pair of nippers), and the nightly habit that changes the way nails grow in across a full season. A drop of jojoba, almond, or a dedicated cuticle oil, twice a day, worked into the base of each nail for thirty seconds. Within four weeks, the new growth coming in at the matrix will look visibly different from the older nail. Within a season, the entire plate will have grown out from a hydrated matrix. The cheapest, slowest, most reliable habit in the category. Read it at /en/nails/cuticle-care/.
At-Home vs Salon
What each is good at, and where the maths actually breaks even. Salon for events, gel removal you do not have time for, acrylic fills, hard-gel extensions, and any manicure done on a non-dominant hand at speed. At-home for the in-between weeks where the manicure is meant to feel like a small ritual rather than an appointment. The break-even point sits somewhere around two salon visits a month — above that, it is cheaper and often better to learn the technique at home; below that, the salon visit is the more honest line item. The page also addresses the hidden cost of bad salons: under-cured gel, aggressive cuticle work, and rushed removal. Read it at /en/nails/at-home-vs-salon/.
How to use this chapter
The dimensions are doors, not boxes. Manicure is the technique — the order of operations is responsible for more saved manicures than any product upgrade in the category. Gel vs Polish is the chemistry; the choice is made on the basis of how the hand will be used in the next two weeks, not on what is in front of you on the counter. Strengthening is hydration first, keratin second, and most readers have it the wrong way around. Nail Art is the editorial register and the skill ladder, with restraint of register as the central rule. Cuticle Care is the long view, slow, cheap, and the most under-done habit in the category. At-Home vs Salon is the maths, with an honest break-even and a clear list of services the salon does materially better.
If you have never done a manicure that lasted a full week
Click into Manicure and read the order-of-operations page slowly. Wear is set in the first thirty seconds — by prep, by cap, by cure — not by the polish itself. The technique adjustments in the page will change the way the bottle on your shelf behaves tonight. The free-edge cap alone will add three to five days to most lacquer manicures and two to four days to most at-home gel sets.
If your nails are peeling, ridging, or breaking
Click into Strengthening first, and skip the supplement aisle on the way. The reset is mostly hydration, modest use of strengthener, a polish-free week, and consistent oil. Most readers will see meaningful improvement in four to six weeks. If they do not, or if there is colour change in the nail bed, the chapter points clearly to a dermatologist — nails are reliable signals of broader health, and the warnings are worth respecting rather than buffing over.
If you have been doing gel for years and your nails feel thinner
Click into Gel vs Polish and read the removal protocol. Gel itself is rarely the problem; gel removal is. The slow soak-and-foil method takes the polish off without taking the nail with it. Most thinning, peeling, and post-gel pain is a removal problem, not a polish problem. Fix the removal and the next set will land on a healthier plate.
Editor's note from Nelly
I think about nails the way I think about a watch face — the smallest editorial decision you make all day, repeated twenty times an hour, in front of every single person you speak to. I am not a maximalist about them. I am exacting. The cuticle is clean, the edge is shaped, the colour is one I have worn before and will wear again. The hand should look like it belongs to the person it is attached to. Nelly Whitcombe, Beauty Director, Spring 2026.
Frequently asked questions
Should I use gel or regular polish for daily wear?
Gel wears for two to three weeks without chipping; classic lacquer wears for four to seven days at best. If you type for a living, cook, lift, garden, or do anything with your hands beyond signing receipts, gel will give you the longer, cleaner-looking week. The cost is removal — gel must come off via acetone soak, never by peeling or filing, and the cycle of grow-out, soak, fresh set is the part most people underestimate. Classic lacquer is honest about its lifespan, fast to change, and forgiving on the nail plate. The right answer is usually a mix: gel for weeks that need to look done, lacquer for the in-between, and a polish-free week every six to eight weeks regardless.
Can I remove gel polish at home without damaging my nails?
Yes — slowly, and only one way. Buff the shiny top coat lightly so the acetone can penetrate, saturate a small piece of cotton in pure acetone, place it on the nail, and wrap each finger in foil for fifteen to twenty minutes. The gel should slide off with a wooden orange-stick at almost no pressure. If it does not, re-wrap for another five minutes. Never sand, scrape, or peel — every one of those takes layers of the nail plate with the gel and is the single most common cause of thin, peeling, painful nails. The whole process takes thirty minutes. It costs almost nothing. It is the only safe way.
What actually strengthens brittle, peeling nails?
Hydration before keratin, almost always. Brittle nails are usually dehydrated nails, not under-protein nails, and most strengtheners on the shelf overshoot the protein side and harden the plate into something that snaps cleanly instead of bending. The reset is simple: cuticle oil twice a day, a moisturising hand cream after every wash, a polish-free week at least once a month, and a strengthener used as a base coat no more than two or three days a week. Biotin helps a small percentage of people; the strongest evidence is for clinically deficient diets. The single highest-leverage habit is the oil. The single most overrated product is the most expensive strengthener on the shelf.
Is cuticle oil really worth it?
Yes, and it is the most underused tool in the entire category. Nail growth happens at the matrix, under the cuticle, and a hydrated matrix grows a more flexible, less brittle nail. A drop of jojoba, almond, or a dedicated cuticle oil worked into the base of each nail twice a day for thirty seconds is enough. Within four weeks, the new growth coming in at the cuticle will look visibly different from the older nail further down. Within a season, the entire nail will have grown out from a hydrated matrix. It is the cheapest, slowest, most reliable habit in nail care. Most readers under-do it by a factor of ten.
How long does at-home gel actually last?
Two to three weeks if the prep is done well, ten to fourteen days if it is not. The variable is not the polish; it is the cap. Capping the free edge of the nail with every layer — base, colour, top — is the single technique that doubles the wear of an at-home gel. Skip it and the manicure lifts at the tips by day five. The other variable is curing — gel under-cured by even thirty seconds will lift early, while gel over-cured will discolour. Read the lamp's curing time for the brand of polish you are using; do not guess. With those two corrections, an at-home set will rival a salon set on wear. The polish work itself is rarely the issue.
Is there nail art that does not read juvenile after thirty?
Plenty. The rule is restraint of register, not avoidance of art. A single chrome accent on the ring finger, a deep negative-space line, a tonal French in oxblood on the actual nail colour, a quietly imperfect hand-painted abstract in two colours that share a temperature — all of these read as adult. What pushes nail art into juvenile territory is usually scale (too many design elements per nail), saturation (every primary colour at full chroma), or theme (literal seasonal motifs at literal scale). Treat the hand like an editorial spread, not a craft project. Pick one move per manicure. The nails will look more grown-up than no art at all.
How often should I go to a nail salon?
For lacquer alone, never strictly necessary — a clean at-home manicure, done well, will out-perform a rushed salon job. For gel, every two to three weeks for fills or fresh sets, depending on growth rate. For acrylic or hard-gel extensions, every two to three weeks without exception, because grown-out extensions stress the natural nail. The honest answer for most readers is: salon for events, transitions, and gel removal you do not have time for; at-home for weeks where you have the time and want the manicure to feel like a small ritual rather than an appointment. The maths breaks even somewhere around two salon visits a month. Above that, learn to do it yourself.
What are the signs that I should stop polishing entirely for a while?
White chalky patches across the surface of the nail, layers peeling at the tip, a noticeable thinning of the plate, sustained tenderness at the cuticle, lifting of polish or gel within days of application, or any new ridging that runs across rather than along the nail. Any one of those is a signal that the nail plate has lost moisture and needs a polish-free month — oil twice a day, hand cream, no acetone, no buffing, no strengthener. Most nails recover fully in four to six weeks. If they do not, or if the changes are accompanied by colour shifts in the nail bed, see a dermatologist. The nails are reliable indicators of broader skin and systemic health, and the warning signs are worth respecting.
Related dimensions across the network
Skin — nails sit at the end of the same skin. The hydration discipline that runs the face runs the hand and the nail too: hand cream after every wash, sunscreen on the back of the hand, and the same restraint with hot water and over-cleansing. URL: /en/skin/.
Makeup — the colour story of the hand is part of the colour story of the face. The same family of accents — rose, oxblood, terracotta, soft chrome — reads across both without ever needing to match exactly. URL: /en/makeup/.
Hair — the protein-and-moisture balance that decides whether a nail bends or snaps decides whether hair stretches or breaks. The reset for one is often the reset for the other, and the chapter cross-references where it helps. URL: /en/hair/.
Fragrance — the back of the hand is one of the underused places to wear scent, and the inside of the wrist sits next to the cuticle that has just been oiled. The two chapters share more skin than the magazines usually admit. URL: /en/fragrance/.
The longer view of the nails chapter
Why this chapter is organised the way it is
Most nail writing on the internet is organised one of three ways — by colour trend, by celebrity manicure, or by ranked best-of polish lists. None of those organising principles are useful if the question is how to wear nails, rather than how to be sold nails. The chapter is therefore organised around the questions a real reader actually has when they sit down at the table with a bottle: how do I do this so it lasts, what should I be using, what does my nail need right now, what kind of art belongs on this hand, what habit will change the way they grow in over a season, and where do I get the best return on the time I am willing to spend. Six dimensions. Six honest questions. Nothing else.
The chapter's editorial register
Every page in the nails chapter is written in a register Nelly calls editorial-precise. Where the skin chapter is clinical-warm and fragrance is personal-precise, nails are exact and dry. The voice is allowed to care about chemistry. It refuses to be sentimental about polish brands. Houses appear when a house has earned the citation. Polish chemistries — solvent-based, polymer, hybrid — are introduced where they help and skipped where they obscure. The reader is presumed to be a literate adult interested in nails the way they are interested in shoes or watches: as something that rewards attention and does not require obsession.
What the chapter deliberately does not include
We do not rank polishes. We do not run "best of" colour lists. We do not chase manicure trends, and we will not write a piece about a TikTok look because it is loud. We do not endorse the supplement-led approach to nail strength uncritically, though we will write about clinically meaningful interventions where the evidence supports them. We do not write nails through a gendered lens. We will name reactivity issues, allergens (especially HEMA in gel formulas), and the dermatology cases where the nail is signalling something larger plainly when it matters, and we will direct medically reactive readers to a dermatologist where appropriate.
Manicure — what to expect on the L2 page
The Manicure page opens with the order of operations: shape, push the cuticle, prep the plate, base, two coats of colour, top, and oil. Each step is illustrated with a short prose explanation of why it sits where it sits and what happens to the manicure if it is moved. The page then deepens into shape (square, oval, almond, soft-square, coffin, the cases for and against each on a real hand), prep (the buffing question, the dehydrator question, the alcohol wipe), and the cap-the-edge rule that is responsible for more saved manicures than any other technique adjustment. Nine ordered steps, six walkthroughs, and one rule: the manicure is set in the first thirty seconds, not in the colour. The page links onward to /en/nails/manicure/order-of-operations/ for the full sequence broken out as a printable step-by-step.
The cap-the-edge rule
Capping the free edge of the nail — running the brush across the very tip with every layer of polish, base through top — is the single technique that doubles the wear of most manicures. The L3 page at /en/nails/manicure/cap-the-edge/ explains why. The free edge is where wear begins. Polish lifts at the tip first because the tip is where the nail is most exposed to friction, water, and impact. Sealing each layer over the edge protects the layer below it and prevents the chip from starting. Skip the cap and the manicure will lift at the tips by day three or four. Honour it and the manicure will live to the end of its real lifespan.
Gel vs Polish — what to expect on the L2 page
The Gel vs Polish page is the chemistry primer. It opens with the difference between solvent-based film (lacquer) and UV-cured polymer (gel), and works through the formats sitting between them — extended-wear hybrids that try to deliver gel-like wear without UV, dip systems that bond a coloured powder into a resin, and builder gels that sit between manicure and extension. Each format gets the honest accounting: wear time, removal cost, plate impact, application difficulty, and the kind of nail and hand each format suits best. The page also handles the safe-removal protocol — soak, foil, wait, gently lift — and is uncompromising about the alternatives. Sanding, scraping, and peeling are the single most common cause of thinned, weakened nails, and the L3 page at /en/nails/gel-vs-polish/safe-removal/ exists to make the slow method easier than the fast one.
The HEMA question
HEMA is a methacrylate used in many gel formulas and is responsible for a growing number of contact-dermatitis cases at the cuticle and the sides of the fingers. The L3 page at /en/nails/gel-vs-polish/hema/ catalogues the brands that publish HEMA-free formulas, explains the difference between HEMA and the larger methacrylate family, and lays out what to do if a reader develops a reaction (stop the gel cycle immediately, leave the polish off for at least a month, see a dermatologist if the symptoms persist). The page is not anti-gel. It is honest about the small but rising population of readers for whom standard gel chemistries no longer work.
Strengthening — what to expect on the L2 page
The Strengthening page is the corrective. It opens with the diagnostic — how to tell whether a nail is dehydrated or under-protein, because the two conditions look similar from the outside and respond very differently to treatment. Most brittle nails are dehydrated; the L2 page assumes that is the more common starting point and walks through a six-week reset built on hydration, modest use of strengthener, a polish-free week, and consistent oil. The page is also honest about the protein side: hydrolysed keratin in a base coat, used two or three days a week at most, can help a nail that is genuinely under-protein, but used more often it overshoots and snaps. Biotin is given the small section it deserves — useful in clinically deficient diets, less useful elsewhere, and not the answer to most reader complaints.
The six-week reset
The six-week reset at /en/nails/strengthening/brittle-recovery/ is a working schedule for nails that snap, peel, or ridge. Week one and two: no polish, oil twice a day, hand cream after every wash, no acetone. Week three and four: introduce a strengthener as a base coat, two days a week, paired with a sheer wash colour for low-stress wear. Week five and six: return to a normal manicure cadence, keep the oil habit, and observe the new growth coming in at the cuticle. Most readers see visible improvement by the end of week four. Most readers who do not are missing the oil — the reset depends on hydration the way a face routine depends on moisturiser, and skipping it is the most common reason the schedule fails.
Nail Art — what to expect on the L2 page
The Nail Art page opens with the editorial register, then the skill ladder. Register first: nail art reads as adult when the move is restrained, the colour family is intentional, and the scale is calibrated to the hand. It reads as juvenile when the manicure is asked to carry too many ideas. The chapter holds a one-move-per-manicure rule and treats every successful look — single chrome accent, tonal French, negative-space line, hand-painted abstract — as a single editorial decision rather than a stack of decorations. The skill ladder then sets out the actual technical progression: a perfect single-tone manicure first, then a clean French, then negative space, then chrome, then freehand line work. Most readers skip rungs and run into trouble.
The skill ladder
The skill ladder at /en/nails/nail-art/skill-ladder/ is a working progression for any reader who wants to develop the hand, not just buy more polish. Single tone is the foundation — clean, consistent, well-capped, the same colour wearing well across all ten nails. French is the first real test of placement and steadiness. Negative space introduces patience and edge work. Chrome adds powders and burnishing technique. Freehand line work, last and hardest, requires a steady hand, a fine brush, and a resigned acceptance that any single nail can require three takes. The ladder takes years if taken seriously and produces a real skill at the end.
Cuticle Care — what to expect on the L2 page
The Cuticle Care page treats the cuticle not as a thing to remove but as a thing to maintain. The page opens with anatomy — the difference between cuticle and eponychium and why most "cuticle removal" is actually live-tissue removal that should never be done — and moves into the routine: push gently with an orange stick after a shower, never cut, oil twice a day, every day, year-round. The L3 page at /en/nails/cuticle-care/oil-routine/ is the working schedule, and the chapter holds it as the single most under-done habit in the entire category. Used honestly, it changes the way nails grow in within a season. Skipped, it leaves every other intervention working harder than it needs to.
The cuticle oil routine
Twice a day, a drop per nail, worked into the base for thirty seconds. The L3 page at /en/nails/cuticle-care/oil-routine/ catalogues the oils that work — jojoba, sweet almond, vitamin E, dedicated cuticle oils — and the texture and absorption profile of each. A small bottle lasts months. A four-week consistent application is enough to see new growth coming in differently. A full season is enough to grow out a transformed plate. The routine costs almost nothing, takes almost no time, and is the single highest-leverage habit in nail care.
At-Home vs Salon — what to expect on the L2 page
The At-Home vs Salon page is the maths. It opens with a break-even calculation built around the cost of a salon visit, the time cost of an at-home manicure, the equipment investment for at-home gel, and the hidden cost of bad salons. Most readers will land on a hybrid: salon for events, removal, and any work on a non-dominant hand at speed; at-home for the in-between weeks. The page is honest about the services the salon does materially better — gel removal, acrylic fills, hard-gel extensions — and equally honest about the services where a careful at-home job will out-perform a rushed salon job. The break-even sits somewhere around two salon visits a month for most readers. Above that, the at-home investment pays back inside the first quarter.
The honest accounting
The honest accounting at /en/nails/at-home-vs-salon/break-even/ is a printable worksheet. Rows for salon cost, salon frequency, at-home equipment cost, polish cost, time per manicure, time savings of gel over lacquer, and the implicit hourly rate of the time you are spending at a chair versus the time you would spend at your own table. The worksheet does not pretend the answer is the same for every reader. It produces an honest break-even given the way the reader actually lives, with sensible defaults and room to override every line.
A note on nails and broader health
Nails are reliable indicators of broader skin and systemic health. Sustained ridging, colour change in the nail bed, lifting that begins from the cuticle rather than the tip, dark longitudinal stripes, and any rapid change in plate texture are all signals worth taking to a dermatologist. The chapter is not a substitute for medical advice and will not pretend to be. Where a reader's nails are signalling something larger, the chapter points clearly at dermatology and away from the polish bottle. Most nail problems are technique problems. A small minority are not.
How the chapter relates to the rest of the network
The nails chapter sits inside the Beauty Edition, which sits inside the HowTo Network — six editions covering Home, Food, Beauty, Travel, Tech, and Family. The methodology is the same across every edition: protocols over products, dimensions over categories, expert voices written in a register that respects the reader. The nails chapter cross-references the skin, hair, makeup, and fragrance chapters of the Beauty Edition where the technique requires it. We do not duplicate content across editions.
The chapter's expert team
The nails chapter is led by Nelly Whitcombe, the Beauty Director of HowTo Beauty Edition, with a register that is exact, dry, and unsentimental about colour while serious about technique. She is supported by a roster of named contributors: working manicurists who consult on the technical pages, dermatologists who review the strengthening and reactivity material, and a panel of testers across nail types and use patterns whose long-term feedback shapes the wear estimates and the at-home protocols. Every L3 page on the chapter carries the contributor's byline. No page is anonymous. Authority is named, and the readers can find every contributor's other work on the contributor index at /contributors/.
Closing note
If you want a manicure that actually lasts, start with Manicure. If your nails are giving you trouble, start with Strengthening. If you are deciding between gel and lacquer, start with Gel vs Polish. If you are tired of art that does not feel right, start with Nail Art. If you want the slowest, cheapest, most reliable habit in the whole category, start with Cuticle Care. If you are doing the maths on time and money, start with At-Home vs Salon. The chapter is built so that any of those entry points is a complete, self-contained beginning. Treat the hand like an editorial spread. Pick one move per manicure. The chapter will be here when you come back to refine the answer.