Monday, April 22, 2013

Spring Cleaning at the Nail Salon

 It's that time of the year again...Spring Cleaning at the salon! The obvious is to go through all of your products and discard anything that is expired, reevaluate any areas that may have become cluttered and if you're like me, get out your label gun and go hog wild sorting, organizing and labeling like your life depends on it!

But what else can you do to spruce up your salon and make the most of your efforts? 
Here are some helpful hints:

Leftover lotions and ScrubsGather up any remaining scrubs or lotions you may have lying around the salon. As with nail polish, all of us have creams, lotions, and scrubs that either weren’t a client favorite or we never finished using. Combining them together can save you money as well as create a new signature product for your salon.

Tips
  • Organize products into scents that complement each other. For example, pair fruit fragrances together instead of with almond or vanilla. 
  • Mixing lotions with opposite consistencies can make the perfect pair.  Combining a “too-thick” cream and a “too-thin” lotion can ultimately produce the optimum consistency for your new “signature” cream.
  • If your scrubs are partially dried out, you can add the last drops of cuticle oils to the mixture or even standard olive oil to improve consistency. 

Nail Polish We all have those bottles of nail polish that are only about 1/4 full and will inevitably thicken beyond saving or dry up and will have to be discarded. Why not do what many of the celebrity Nail Techs do at Fashion Week and create your own custom colors by combining these leftovers? All you need are some empty nail polish bottles (and ball bearings for mixing) from your local beauty supply store (or you can easily order these on Amazon or eBay).

Tips
  •  Have fun and be creative, but try to mix colors that will complement each other so you don't end up with an unattractive shade that no one will want to wear. As a rule, try not to mix more than 3 colors together.

  • Purchase a small plastic painter's palette at your local art supply store so you can test your color mixes with small amounts of polish to make sure you like the results before you use up all of your resources.

  • Keep records of what products you mixed together and in what proportions so you can recreate a color that becomes a hit with your clients.

  • Make homemade labels for your bespoke color creations and give them fun, original names!

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