Nail Nipper for Beginners: Avoid These Common Mistakes

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DIY manicures can be thrilling but intimidating too. Who doesn't want manicures like they just came from the salon? However, that often requires a level of dexterity and comfort with nail implements that may take a bit of practice. Picking up a nail nipper for the first time often feels like you are about to perform mini-surgery rather than engage in some self-care.


Nail nipper are for trimming tough toenails and fingernails and sometimes even the dead tissue that you may find around the nail beds. As innocent as they may look, a Nail nipper is very dangerous when misused and can lead to an excruciating pain and can also lead to nail bed infections. This will help you navigate the process without making the mistakes that many novices seem to make.


Understanding Your Tool 


Before we get started, allow me to give you a nail nipper info sesh. Nail nippers are not the same as nail clippers. Nail nippers come with a plier style handle and have a finer blade that is sharp and also hand-honed to converge. This is what allows the nipper to do the work of a nail clipper and even work in the hangnail area.


Mistake 1: Getting the size/type wrong


Noticing the type and size of a nipper can be the make-it or break-it of your first experience. Nail nippers are only heavier if they are an all-purpose nail nipper.


Fingernail nipper: a smaller and finer gauge.


Toenail nipper: they are generally heavier and larger. Using a nipper that is too large for the job will often result in unintended slips.


The Preparation Phase: Don’t Skip It!


Many beginners make one major mistake: they dive right into the "nipping" without first taking their nuggets through the prep phase.


Mistake 2: Cutting nails when they are dry


 Cutting nails when they are dry is a disaster waiting to happen. When nails are dry they are much more susceptible to splitting and cracking.


The Fix: Always soak your hands or feet in warm water for 5 to 10 minutes before you tool. This softens the nail plate and causes the nails to cut and feel like you are trying to pull through a stick instead wood .


Mistake 3: Forgetting sanitization


When nail nipers are coming in contact with your skin they are a cutting tool.  Not sanitizing tools between use and sharing NT is one way to certainly develop helpful bacteria in your little cuts and scrapes leading to some nasty infections.


The Fix: Always sharply clean them with active particles at their highest strength before and after each use.  Never share your tools with a nay or even a strong deep in own household.


Mastering the Technique


The overall healthy functioning of your nails is determined by the way you hold and move the tool.


Mistake #4: Pulling and Tugging at the Skin


This mistake is one of the most painful. One of the most common mistake of beginners when attempting to remove a hangnail or cut a bit of cuticle is to "clip and pull."


The Fix: Nail nippers are designed to cut. What you need to do is place the blades of the nippers where you want the cut, squeeze, and pull the nippers away. If the hangnail doesn't come off, you need to reposition the nail nipper and then cut again. When you pull on hangnail, you are at risk of causing the skin to tear away resulting in soreness and of course bleeding.


Mistake #5: You're Not Supposed to Cut the Living Cuticle


The "cuticle" is the dead, translucent tissue around the nail whereas "eponychium" is the living tissue.


The Fix: You can cut the dead tissue if well hangnail or well dehydrated, but never cut of the living and pink tissue. That tissue is the body's natural barrier, and you are baby setting yourself for germs and disease.


Habits of aftercare:


After using the nail nipper, what you do after is as equally important as the trim itself.


Mistake #7: You Forget to Moisturize


Once you're done trimming, your skin and your nails are very ornery, especially if you fail to properly care for the skin.


The Fix: Ensure that you apply cuticle oil or hand cream that is rich with moisture, and be generous with it. That will keep your trimmed cuticle or hangnail site well moisturized and flexible.


Mistake 7: Not Storing the Tool Right


When you carelessly throw a nipper into a full drawer, you risk bending the tips or dulling the blades. Once a nail nipper becomes dull, cutting becomes strenuous, and you dramatically increase the risk of a slip and cut.


The Fix: Using a protection cap is a must when storing a professional nipper. It is also essential to keep your tools in a dry place to avoid them rusting.


Why Beauty Accessories Should be of High Quality


A budget-friendly manicure kit is great, but when you add low quality tools, such as budget nippers, to your kit, you end up saving money but ruining your hands. It is a big risk to opt for the price of a beauty accessory instead of the quality. Nails cut with budget beauty tools leave women shaving the edges of their nails and wondering where the money they saved actually went.


The good thing about beauty accessories of high quality is your tools remain safe, and your nippers, cutting tools, scissors, remain high quality and sharp for a long time. It is a one time purchase to add a high quality nipper to your beauty accessory collection, and it completely improves your self-care routine.


FAQ’s


1) For how long and how frequently should you be using a nipper? If you're taking proper care of your nails, only when they're long. So for your hands you'd be looking at about once or twice a week, and for your feet about once a month. If you groom them routinely at shorter intervals, you risk damaging and weakening your nail bed.


2. My nipper feels stiff. What should I do? Unstick your nipper by adding one drop of sewing machine oil or mineral oil to the joint. Open and close the nipper multiple times to distribute the oil. Finally, clean the nipper to remove the oil you added.


3. Can I use a nail nipper to cut artificial nails? It is ill-advised. Using an artificial nail tip cutter is the recommended tool, as acrylics and hard gels can chip and dull the blades of a nail nipper.


4. What should I do if I accidentally cut myself? Treat your cut as panic is not a natural response. Lightly bandage your cut after you clean the area to remove any dirt or bacteria. Doubt your bandage as you should check for any signs of infection, especially swelling or any sort of pus or drainage, for the next two days.


5. What should I do if my nipper gets dull? It’s time to be your own nail salon and unite local population scared of nails. Be a hero and local nail salon. Make an on ace knife sharp again and won’t neglect a salon.


Finally, as long as you respect the “living skin” barrier while keeping your tools sharp and your skin hydrated, you will successfully transition from being a nervous beginner to a DIY pro in a flash!




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