Jump to content
  • Welcome to the TransPulse Forums!

    We offer a safe, inclusive community for transgender and gender non-conforming folks, as well as their loved ones, to find support and information.  Join today!

Fake Nails


Guest Ariel Mai

Recommended Posts

Guest Ariel Mai

So I just bought my first pair of fakeif you do them right. I was wondering how many of you guys rock the fake nails? Are they a yeah I like them, or a no fake nails are tacky?

Lots of Love,

Ariel Mai

-Favorite use is that easy to remove before school/ easy to apply after school.

1058315_f260.jpg

Link to comment
Guest Donna Jean

.

I personally love them....

I used them for a long time because my own nails have problems...

Now I get gels at a salon that last a month...

The fakes were fun and cheap!

Huggs

Donna Jean

Link to comment
Guest sarah f

Those are pretty nails. I have acrylic nails now that I am full time. I found that they are better for me. The gel nails would still break on me but acrylic nails are stronger and haven't had any problems.

Link to comment
Guest Elizabeth K

Fun - and they can be removed when you get tired of them. Like most full time girls I have had acrylic nails - since November actually. I tried my natural nails - but I was always breaking them and having to mow down the others and start over. Acrylic nails have to be reworked every month $20 - yikes - but the salons do a beautiful job with darker reds nail polish, something I can't get exactly right Plus it is so affirming to get your nails done

Pretty nails. I have mine in French Manicure right now. The white is put on with an airbrush.

We need to have pretty hands - so good, isn't it.

Lizzy

Link to comment

My own nails break way too easily, i get acrylics now and my nails never looked better, unfortunately i have to remove them when i have my surgery, but i will be getting another set as soon as i am able.

Paula

Link to comment
Guest BeckyTG

Ariel Mai,

I love them, those nails rock! They look real enough to me. I used them for years and loved them.

Using them part time highlighted how much long nails feminize your hand movements and finger usage. Men poke at things with the tips of their fingers, women press things with the pads of their fingers. Big difference.

Men also tend to be much harsher with their hand movements, women are very gentle and soft with them. Those nails help remind you of that.

I love nails and yours look fab, girl.

Becky

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

When I lived female my nails were always a big focus for me.

I'm an artist and loved being able to have the drama or flair I felt like expressing at the time

You can express so much with how you keep your nails and what you wear on them.

Your nails just look so fun and artistic and free spirited. Have fun with them!

Hugs

John

Link to comment
Guest Ariel Mai

Thank you guys so much :), I also like them because they make my fingers look longer because I have like baby sized hands. I think they are fun, also you can just take them off and put a different colour on to match your outfit too :). Once I go full time (day after school ends) I am getting acrylics because I heard that they are amazing, just clueless as to what pattern/colour I should get.

Lots of Love,

<3 Ariel Mai

Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

One thing you can do when you get acrylics is to buy some bling or designs for them and change then as you want or get creative your own way.

After going a couple of times I learned to do my own acrylics because I could do better than most of the nail techs and then did my designs from kits and things I got at beauty supply stores. That way you can change your polish and look as often as you want and not pay a fortune. They have stripes and stones and flowers and designs. It's really fun to see all there is and come up with looks.

Filling the nails every couple of weeks or so is more difficult for me than creating them but after some sore cuticles I got good at it. Depends on how crafty you are and how much you like doing it I guess.

If you do your own first go to a good nail tech and watch carefully. Then get a good kit at a beauty supply and have fun. Getting good brushes and brush cleaner is essential. And I'd really recommend using boards rather than a dremel to do nail prep. Dremels can damage nail beds unless you are an expert with one. A good emery board works as well although is slower. I've used dremels for art since they came out-make dollhouse miniatures and carve with them and I still wouldn't use one on nails.

Whatever way you go-just have fun with it

Hugs

John

Link to comment
Guest Ariel Mai

Thanks for the advice JJ, yeah I think it would be worth it to learn how to do it myself rather than pay 20$ to get them filled. :) Sounds like hard work, but I have a lot of extra time so why not learn how.

Lots of Love,

<3 Ariel

Link to comment
Guest Lizzie McTrucker

The fun thing about acrylics is you don't have to get nail art on them at all. You can just get them whatever color you feel like, or perhaps to go with an outfit you're wearing. If you get tired of the color, a polish change is just $3 (or so).

Speaking of, I may be getting acrylics soon too. I just broke another nail today. That's 3 this week. This Sally Hansen Diamond Strength isn't...well..the nails that did break are on my dominant hand so I guess that's to be expected.

Oh and if you're not used to acrylics or having nails, get them cut down to active/sport length. That way you can get used to having them and functioning with them (ever try tucking with fake nails? it feels like Freddy Kruger is trying to get frisky with you). Then once you're used to them, then get them a little longer. :)

Link to comment
Guest sarah f

The fun thing about acrylics is you don't have to get nail art on them at all. You can just get them whatever color you feel like, or perhaps to go with an outfit you're wearing. If you get tired of the color, a polish change is just $3 (or so).

Speaking of, I may be getting acrylics soon too. I just broke another nail today. That's 3 this week. This Sally Hansen Diamond Strength isn't...well..the nails that did break are on my dominant hand so I guess that's to be expected.

Oh and if you're not used to acrylics or having nails, get them cut down to active/sport length. That way you can get used to having them and functioning with them (ever try tucking with fake nails? it feels like Freddy Kruger is trying to get frisky with you). Then once you're used to them, then get them a little longer. :)

Lizzie you are so right about getting used to them before getting them too long. I don't have mine that long but it took some time to get used to them. I was constantly hitting them on things and that hurts. You don't want to break one because either because of how much it hurts.

Link to comment
Guest audrey michelle

ehhh. my own nails are strong and grow quickly and come out round. never really wore fake nails before and i doubt i willl. my nine year old niece is obsessed with fake nails, haha. yours are pretty though!

Link to comment
Guest MelissaC

I have naturally wide nails, so most fake nails don't fit over them properly.

It's too bad that I can't enjoy the fun of switching them whenever I feel like a change, but then again I'm fine with just doing my own nails anyways.

Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Who's Online   2 Members, 0 Anonymous, 114 Guests (See full list)

    • MaybeRob
    • Kait
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.8k
    • Total Posts
      770.5k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,115
    • Most Online
      8,356

    Tiffany Cross
    Newest Member
    Tiffany Cross
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. Alex Blitzen
      Alex Blitzen
    2. ARK
      ARK
      (37 years old)
    3. Beverley50
      Beverley50
      (58 years old)
    4. Em
      Em
    5. Jlandry1970
      Jlandry1970
  • Posts

    • Birdie
      Frustrating day yesterday.....   It seems the centre had used the "lack of enough prep time", and "you must get a full shower to be able to attend" to basically get their way. It is what it is, because I basically have no defence.   I did mention that female participants are scheduled with enough time for their hair and makeup, but their response was of course, "you are not female."   I can either abide by the rules or leave the program.    I did file a complaint yesterday about years of excruciating pain I endured in my leg that their doctor accused me of "inventing" because I "didn't have anything wrong with it." And how after vascular surgery the horrible pain has finally departed.  How it is absolutely absurd that medical professionals can minimise someone's pain like it doesn't exist.    Their reply, "well, at least your were finally seen by a specialist and taken care of."   The meeting did not go well!   So starting today I have two options. Either cut my hair off or wear it in a ponytail. I shall go with the ponytail. I will also let my hair grow until it reaches my hips, and I told them that as well. As long as it's in a ponytail at will be acceptable. 
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      I disagree with this...I don't think it is good news to tell parents they can't opt their kids out of sex/gender instruction at ages they feel are inappropriate, or that violate their faith.    However, perhaps some good will come out of this.  I hope it totally destabilizes public education, or at least yields robust state voucher programs so parents who can't afford to homeschool can send their kids elsewhere.  It might even encourage some folks to move to areas where they fit better.  One of my husband's friends lives in Montgomery County, and has two kids in the school system there.  They've been talking about leaving, long before this, for multiple reasons.  
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      Its after midnight, so... good morning?   Looks like no traveling for me this week.  Some of the expected orders from Houston never materialized, so there are fewer shipments going out.  Instead of having to help out with transport, my husband gets to stay home.  Not that I'll miss Texas, but I was looking forward to some road time.  Oh well. 
    • Carolyn Marie
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      If the Supreme Court isn't taking on this case or many others, I would guess that it isn't as "conservative" as many folks fear.    However, I wonder if the reality is worse.  I'd prefer a ruling either way, just to settle this stuff so we know where we stand.  By leaving things relatively undecided, they're prolonging social upheaval....we're being used as a distraction.
    • Carolyn Marie
      https://www.cnn.com/2024/05/20/politics/supreme-court-transgender-montgomery-county-maryland/index.html     Carolyn Marie
    • MaeBe
      They may feel disappointed or aggrieved, but that's on them. It's on society really.   In the end, who should really care other than you and the higher power(s) you believe in? I haven't been a willful volunteer at all in my adult life (if ever), I surely did so as a youth but can you consider that willful if you're required to? Since allowing this part of me to shine I have been more active in the community, volunteering and participating in society in ways I never did before. Perhaps you'll feel the same when you allow yourself to.   My wife and my kids all see me and how I've changed. I haven't hidden it away from them, but I realize I may have lucked out with their general acceptance. Where the struggle comes is from my internal fight with putting it out in the world. "What are your pronouns? Have you changed your name?" are all asked of me and it feels like a lot when I just want to be me, but I understand where it comes from. That is why I resolved to register as my nickname and use She/Her at the HRC conference, because I owe it to myself to have permission to embody who am I. Now it's just finding a new job as this person that I am and not the person I thought I was--not eschewing the past, but realizing that there's no reason to feel that that was a better me.   It wasn't.
    • EasyE
      Bingo for me!!. In some ways I wish it were more cut and dry. Like some folks on here who knew when they were 2 years old that they were a girl (and everyone else around them knew too). I don't have that. I do have a fascination & enchantment with the feminine that started very young. It is both something I am attracted to (like tonight at Target I couldn't keep my eyes off all the beautiful females in my midst) and something I aspire to be and connect with at a deep level.    For me, there has always been a drive to express this feminine dimension outwardly through clothing. I can see that thread from all the way back when I was a kid. I have always wanted to wear girls/women's underwear. And I have always pushed the boundaries of wanting to wear girl stuff under my clothes, though I've known that if I ever got caught (in high school, on my swim team, by my wife!) there would be hell to pay...   This drive continued through college, into adulthood, into marriage (even though I thought that would solve it because I could finally be intimate with a woman and it not be a "sin")... I always felt such shame about this part of me until about two years ago I finally started asking myself, "what is so wrong with this?" Once I gave myself permission to explore this further, and with the help of a therapist who for the first time validated my experience instead of shaming me, my "egg cracked" and the embers were fanned into a wildfire (sorry about all the mixed metaphors, lol)...    Now I have a whole closet and drawers full of women's clothes (many of which I only wear when I am alone), I am separated from my wife, my kids have an inkling of my feminine side but not much more than that, and I am two months into "covert" HRT wondering when/if there will come a day of reckoning when it becomes obvious what I am doing...    I guess deep down I just feel like a misfit and that my life could have been/could be so much more impactful and that I am a giant disappointment to everyone around me... 
    • Lydia_R
      I made the pumpkin pie this morning.  I like getting older and getting better at making this pie crust.  I've never purchased a pre-made pie crust.  I make 3-4 pies a year.  Mostly pumpkin pies, but apple and blackberry when those come into season.  For about 15 years, I was buying about 2 medium carving pumpkins a year and cooking/pureeing them and putting them in 2c measurements into the freezer.  I started getting lazy a few years ago and am just doing cans of pumpkin now.    
    • Lydia_R
      "Children growing up, old friends growing older.  Freeze this moment a little bit longer.  Make each sensation a little bit stronger." -Neil Peart   Dead bat x2
    • Ladypcnj
      My parents didn't show me my birth certificate until I started going to school, in the meantime until that happened,   I was mostly seen wearing boys' clothes, but my mannerisms mostly female without the use of hormones. My parents thought I was going through as phase, until one day things took a physical turn in my puberty years, which resulted in a family car ride to the hospital emergency. I had my share examinations, treating doctors could not come up a diagnosis what was happening to me. I would soon discover I was born with a hidden variation or undescended, which could had been ovaries inside. Things got to the point which resulted in surgery, I didn't know about. I asked for my surgical medical records, but access denied. So, I live with a surgical scar, and take medication.  
    • kristinabee
      It's something John Green said somewhat recently referring to the Emily Dickenson poem "Hope Is the Thing With Feathers." The poems first stanza reads   “Hope is the thing with feathers - That perches in the soul - And sings the tune without the words - And never stops - at all -"   It's a beautiful and helpful poem, but what was life changing for me was what John Green said in relation to the poem. "Emily Dickenson doesn't say that one never stops hearing the song of hope, only that it doesn't stop playing... The song of hope is still singing. And I know you can't hear it, but one day soon you will."
    • Ladypcnj
      another link that helped me: Intersex Support and Advocacy Groups Around the World (interactadvocates.org)
    • Ladypcnj
      I like shopping for fashion clothes, finding something nobody else is wearing 
    • Adrianna Danielle
      Going to have a paternity test done tommorrow.Having someone come up and get a sample from me.I remember having unprotected sex with her.Her daughter,she seen a picture of me going to adjust well her supposed dad is now a woman
  • Upcoming Events

Contact TransPulse

TransPulse can be contacted in the following ways:

Email: Click Here.

To report an error on this page.

Legal

Your use of this site is subject to the following rules and policies, whether you have read them or not.

Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
DMCA Policy
Community Rules

Hosting

Upstream hosting for TransPulse provided by QnEZ.

Sponsorship

Special consideration for TransPulse is kindly provided by The Breast Form Store.
×
×
  • Create New...