Showing posts with label Cherimoya. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cherimoya. Show all posts

Monday, March 5, 2012

Chester Cheetah

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Cherimoya 5 Stars, stamped with Sally Hansen The Good Earth, using BM221, topped with Essie Matte About You. I loved this! Doesn't it look like animal print velour?
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Shiny, just because.
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Cherimoya Matte·n·a 5 Stars by itself, one coat, no topcoat. Gorgeous copper penny matte foil. Love that it only needs one coat! Definitely a suede finish, my favorite for mattes.
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And with shiny topcoat. This pic makes it look a bit earwax-ish, but that never occurred to me while wearing it, so it wasn't really noticeable.

Sunday, February 5, 2012

More Cherimoya Pebble Beach

Just wanted to show some options using my Pebble Beaches like 'normal' polish.
This is Fire Opal Step 2 on all except ring, which is Ruby Step 4, ONE coat of each! And, yes, the Fire Opal is *really* that yellow, do NOT adjust your monitors! These are beautiful colors, and I really love that they're one-coaters. Ruby especially really has some depth! The finish is sandy and matte, so this is with topcoat. They're like foils, but grittier than most foil polishes I've tried.
Friendly PSA: All that lovely pigment WILL bleed onto your topcoat brush, so make sure to wipe your brush on a paper towel between dips, or you'll color your bottle of topcoat! Smiley
I sponged the tips in the opposite colors, but you can hardly see Fire Opal over Ruby, unfortunately. Thankfully, the reverse was gorgeous! I attempted to stamp the snakeskin pattern from BM215 using Nina UltraPro Mossy Britches, but it didn't show up even this well in real life, and just muddied the look.
I also tried stamping with the Pebble Beaches on paper, but they didn't stamp well for me, despite being so pigmented. I think they're just too gritty. I'll try again, sometime, though, and if I'm successful I'll definitely post about it.
Another friendly PSA: Use your most trusted anti-staining basecoat under these!
Both of these polishes stained right through my nail treatment + anti-stain basecoat! Smiley Guess this ends my trial of that basecoat! I was really hoping to find a cheaper alternative to Orly Nail Armor, but apparently not this time. Luckily, after my denture cleaner soak/scrub and a couple of weeks with a buffing or two, the staining has faded completely. Smiley

Saturday, February 4, 2012

Cherimoya Pebble Beach Gradient

A few weeks ago, I walked into a 'new' Walgreen's (one that I'd never been in), and the first display I see is an endcap of several Cherimoya lines. I only knew about their 2012 crackle line, so this caught me off guard. They had a full endcap of 2012 crackles, Pebble Beach and Matte•n•a polishes, plus a separate counter display of Vernis Classique! I was floored, and naturally had to snatch up a few of each, especially since all but the mattes were 2 for $5 (all were regularly $2.99 each, but the mattes were excluded from the 2fer special). I thought I'd post about the Pebble Beaches first, since they're the most unique.
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This is how you're 'supposed to' use these - they're made to be gradient polishes, with sets of 4 steps for each polish name. So, this is Emerald Step 1, Fire Opal Step 2, Fire Opal Step 3 and Fire Opal Step 4, used in order. I didn't buy Fire Opal Step 1, because I liked the Emerald one better, and figured they were close enough.
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Here is the same thing without topcoat, to show the almost sandy, matte finish. They're shiny in a foil kind of way, but definitely gritty to the touch, and thick, compared to most regular nail polish. Nothing a coat of Seche Vite can't handle, though. They're very pigmented - easily one-coat coverage when worn alone, so that's a plus.
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I broke down the steps here, to show how to use these. No more sponges needed for gradients! Just use the normal brush and start lower on the nail with each color. If your nails are shorter, I don't see why you couldn't skip a step, just using three colors per nail.
bottle shot, with names for reference
For the curious, and those still reading, I thought I would include a brush comparison. The Cherimoya brush is very similar to OPI Pro Wide brushes, but the bristles tend to splay out a bit more at the end, which makes them slightly more difficult to use, but nothing terrible.
Overall, I really like this idea, because it makes gradient manicures simple and foolproof, kinda like those labeled eye shadow palettes that tell you exactly where each color should go. I'm always a fan of simple, no-brainer nail art! And the price is right to indulge in a full set, too, but they look just as nice on their own, being very shiny and foily.
What do you think? Would you get a full set and use them the way they're intended, or just buy the colors you like and use them individually?