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Anonymous IP: cache-los-aa08.proxy.aol.com
7/13/2005 03:37:45 |
Subject: lol
Message: hi, i know this site is for natural nails. But how come when any asks advice for acrylic nails they get negative answers which are very untrue and that is a fact. It looks to me that these people are just trying to sell their products and make money. The products are probably rubbish and i wouldnt waste my money. You can get quality products elsewhere. These look hande made and probably dont work. I use products that have proven scientific evidence behind it that it works. Just shut up about the whole dont get fake nails, You all havent got a scooby doo about them if you were properly trained.
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Barbara Wheeler
IP: ac5-webproxy48.direcpc.com
7/13/2005 08:14:23 | RE: lol
Message: While the products sold here were in R&D we obtained a lot of information from the Mayo Clinic with regards to the care and health of Natural Nails.
Our products are in fact proven over quite a number of years...Not through "PAID" advertisements or actors on some infomercial. The products were sold exclusively to salons in the Atlanta are for years before I put this website up so that it would be possible for others outside the Atlanta area to have access to the products. And YES! I do have to make a living, though I am not trying to make a killing like so many do...My product works, and it is not out of reach price wise. It is a great value because IT DOES WORK! and one ounce of the Growth Formula will last up to 6 months. This website is dedicated to Natural Nails and is exclusive to selling my own products, and implements that I provide to complete the manicure kit.
So before you over step your bounds and liable yourself publicly you might try the product to see if in fact the things that are stated here are the truth.
If you are so dissatisfied with the information you read please feel free to leave at any time.
Any statements made concerning the fake nails and the industry are the result of the use of the products. The statements made concerning the Natural Nails Growth Formula are the result of the use of the products.
So please just help us provide useful, knowledgeable assistance to those seeking information with regards to their nails. Please be a part of the solution and not be part of the larger problem in our society.
Thank you in advance for your consideration.
Best Regards,
Barbara Wheeler
Owner, fingernailcare.com
P.S.
Who are you any way, you failed to tell any of us your identity. If the "information" you provide here is factual and you are above board then why are you hiding behind Anonymous.
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cheryl
IP: 206.159.161.156
7/13/2005 11:54:23 | RE: lol
Message: anonymous,
you pretty much answered your own question i believe. this is a site for natural nails and nearly all the questions, concerns and problems are about acrylics. what does that tell you? a majority of people are here to ask questions about the aftermath of acrylics to their nails and surrounding skin. which means they have no idea what they are getting into or out of concerning acrylics. i don't care how "careful" the best nail tech is in the world. the same procedure is taught over and over again in school. no one's nails are healthy or the same after they are removed. for techs to tell people that they are or not answer truthfully in the beginning is deceiving. how many nail techs does one have to visit before they find the "right" answer?
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Anonymous
IP: cache-los-aa08.proxy.aol.com
7/15/2005 09:17:49 | RE: lol
Message: sorry, but not every company train the same. There are very much advanced reputable companies out there whoa re up to date with training. Schools who teach are normally behind in teaching up to date, but honestly i take my nails on and off and care for them with my proffesional products, and they are fine. I can see why you may think they get damaged but there is no need to tell people not to get them done, because that is totally unfare to all the good nail technicians out there.
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cheryl
IP: 206.159.161.156
7/15/2005 09:56:26 | RE: lol
Message: in my 3 years of trying to wear them, i never came across a tech that followed the rules of sterilization, disinfection or even acceptable station hygiene. after i finally took them off, for the last time, i started doing some research on what to ask and what to expect out of a nail tech and their "work ethic", just because i had become so disillusioned during those 3 years of finding just one person who know what they were doing or cared. i was cut, sanded, bruised, had "rings of fire", fungal and bacterial infections and ended up in the end, last november, with no nail beds to speak of and no cuticles on some. i don't "think" they are damaged, i know they are. time after time, women come on this forum with basically the same questions and problems with acrylics and the like. they don't know what they are geting into because they are not told. especially young girls.the nail industry is like a loose cannon out here. inconsistencies everywhere.
this is a Natural Nails Forum-not an acrylic forum. i will, at every chance i get, tell women to remove them and grow their own.
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Barbara Wheeler
IP: 69.19.14.19
7/15/2005 10:32:46 | RE: lol
Message: The problem is not the condemnation of the "Companies" that attend to the many out there that are wearing the topical treatments of any kind...It is the fact that anything you adhere or bond to the nails is not beneficial in any literal sense of the word beneficial.
Beyond that, the general populous of nail techs are just "schooled" in the application of the treatments. Not the care and maintenance of the natural nails. Though there are exceptions to every rule, and to those few I say "Thank you".
If every woman, or man, would apply the same care and efforts to the maintenance of the natural nails those "salons" would never have even come into existence. Do you see the general populous of those applying the topical treatments, wearing those same topical treatments? Have you ever wondered why?
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Anonymous
IP: cache-los-aa08.proxy.aol.com
7/18/2005 07:26:08 | RE: lol
Message: you people are living in the past. The academie i trained at has won awards for best training. Unlike colleges who are not updated in the nail indistry. There are advanced products and all the training is up to date, i take a lass evry few months to keep my skills up. The products i use are primer optional so this is no need to apllied anymore. You have to remember the nail plate is dead and doesnt need air to breath and doesnt need a breather from acrylics either. The acrylic just sits on top of the nail and when the nail grows the acrylic moves with it. If someone was to pull or bite the acrylic off then obviously they are going to pull layers of the nail plate of to and this causes them to be weak or damaged. If they got them soaked off proffesionaly followed by a manicure and great homecare product. Then there should be no problem.
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Barbara Wheeler
IP: ac5-webproxy25.direcpc.com
7/18/2005 09:24:30 | RE: lol
Message: Anonymous @IP: cache-los-aa08.proxy.aol.com
The basic problem here is the fact that materials are being BONDED to the surface of the natural nails. It is similar to the materials that are used when someone fiberglasses the surface of a boat. The chemicals literally "bond" together the surface of the natural nails to whatever topical treatment is being applied. So just keep that fact in mind.
The people that are applying these treatments are not wearing these products themselves, and the are using chemical masks during the application of this treatment they apply to your nails....Not their nails, YOUR NAILS...
If the products are not harmful, why are they not using them themselves, and why are they hiding behind masks? And by the way, Anonymous @ IP: cache-los-aa08.proxy.aol.com, please tell me your name, please. It is quite awkward not even knowing the "professional" I am communicating with. You don't have to give out your email address, but a name would be nice...Thanks
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cheryl
IP: 206.159.161.156
7/18/2005 10:37:19 | RE: lol
Message: i did the research for 3 years, trying to find a tech who knew what they were doing. i found no one and ended up with a multitude of problems. soaking off my acrylics just left me with sore, dehydrated nails. it seems as if in "your world" no problems ever happen and when they do it's always the customers fault. have you read the multiple posts on this forum, time after time of women with destroyed nails not knowing where to turn next, after not being given all the facts to begin with. it's great that you went to a good school and that you continue to take classes. you are in the minority. you do realize how many "factory line nail salons" there are in this country? quit hiding behind anonymous. anybody can do that. you have definite views and opinions, just as we do. stand up and be a woman or just a human being.
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leave her alone
IP: 193.82.98.7
7/19/2005 06:39:24 | RE: lol
Message: she is being anoynamous because she dont want nosey parkers like you knowing who she is so stop picking on her please!! its not very nice and she doesnt want to be heard of on this gay website so crawl into a corner and die!
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Anonymous
IP: cache-los-aa08.proxy.aol.com
7/19/2005 06:45:14 | RE: lol
Message: I never give my name, it doesnt mean i am hiding and ashamed of what i do. I love what i do and thats that. There is people in this nail society who do a lovely job and there are people who can do it, people who have just had a few days training and are hacking peoles nails away just for the cash. But not everyone is like that!
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