Yes, but only if you’re okay with tearing your nail beds to shreds and willing to risk your fingertips.
drax3237 on
You want to use nail polish remover that says “100% Acetone” on the bottle and a ceramic or metal bowl. File the top layer of the false nails, pour your remover in the bowl, let ‘em soak for like 30-60 min
mediocreravenclaw on
Olive oil and dish soap is never how you remove acrylic! That is only meant for press on nail glue and it’s still likely damaging. You need a solvent (acetone) to safely dissolve products off the nail plate. I would recommend getting a professional to remove them but if that isn’t an option check out [this video](https://youtu.be/WrpxQhTaBas?si=KhqLgWFJVfraEYhQ) for steps on safe removal. You should use a mask and dust collector of some kind, and be prepared that it’s a long process.
Capable_Box_8785 on
Yes you can. Get you a 100 grit file (actually just buy a big pack) and file file file and then soak in acetone until everything comes off.
5 Comments
short answer: no
long answer: noooooooooo
Yes, but only if you’re okay with tearing your nail beds to shreds and willing to risk your fingertips.
You want to use nail polish remover that says “100% Acetone” on the bottle and a ceramic or metal bowl. File the top layer of the false nails, pour your remover in the bowl, let ‘em soak for like 30-60 min
Olive oil and dish soap is never how you remove acrylic! That is only meant for press on nail glue and it’s still likely damaging. You need a solvent (acetone) to safely dissolve products off the nail plate. I would recommend getting a professional to remove them but if that isn’t an option check out [this video](https://youtu.be/WrpxQhTaBas?si=KhqLgWFJVfraEYhQ) for steps on safe removal. You should use a mask and dust collector of some kind, and be prepared that it’s a long process.
Yes you can. Get you a 100 grit file (actually just buy a big pack) and file file file and then soak in acetone until everything comes off.