What's in it — and why it's different
Our Formula
HEMA-free. Cured by air. Nothing hidden.
Salon-hard nails have always meant one thing: hands under a UV lamp.
Ours never see one. So how do they set?
SIXTY SECONDS — WATCH THE COLOR LAYER SET
Salon-hard. No lamp. How?
Set by material science, not a lamp.
Why dip powder
Why choose dip — and why ours.
It comes down to the method, the formula, and the finish.
The method
No lamp, ever
Air-cured — a brush of activator sets it in about a minute. No UV lamp, no heat, no holding still.
Soak off, no bowl
Removal is a wrap, not a bowl — the set lifts away cleanly and gently.
The formula
HEMA-free
Made without HEMA — the allergen behind most nail reactions — so it stays clean and comfortable to wear.
Super-fine powder, self-leveling liquid
The powder's milled extra fine and the liquid self-levels as it goes on, so color lays down thin, smooth, and even.
The finish
Salon-strong & glassy
Strong and hard-wearing under a deep, glassy gloss — the look of a salon manicure, holding its shine the full 4 weeks.
450+ shades
Pure colors, shimmers, and glitters — 450+ in all, so the exact tone you want is there.
Strength & shape
Why it lasts 4 weeks.
A manicure rarely fails just sitting there. It fails the moment the nail gets knocked or pressed and flexes — that bit of bend is what opens a crack or chips an edge. The longer or thinner the nail, the more it flexes for the same knock, so it gives way sooner. What lasts is a layer that resists the flex, and that comes down to two things working together: what it's made of, and the shape it's built into.
Two pre-formed polymers, set into one solid piece. The color goes on as a fine powder of PMMA — hard and rigid, the body of the layer — blended with a little PnBMA, which is softer and keeps it from going glass-brittle. The base coat is a cyanoacrylate resin that locks them together: on contact with a trace of moisture — from the air, or faster from a brush of activator — it polymerizes, its molecules linking into long chains that bind the powder into a single rigid solid. No lamp, no heat, about a minute at room temperature: where a gel needs a UV light to set, dip uses that quick chemistry instead. And properly applied, the activator drives the cure all the way through — not just a skin on the surface — so it sets as one solid body bonded to the nail, not a film sitting on top that wears thin.
The set is built up, not brushed on flat. You work in thin layers — a little base coat, a dip into the powder — and repeat, two or three times. Because the powder is milled so fine and the base self-levels, every pass goes on smooth and even. The apex comes from where the powder lands: more passes down the center, fewer toward the edges, so it sits a touch thicker through the middle. The powder holds that shape as you build it, and then a brush of activator locks the whole build solid in one go — so it stays exactly where you placed it. What you've shaped is a perfect, mellow curve: the apex.
That gentle curve gives the layer a subtle triangular cross-section: a low peak braced down to each edge. A triangle is the most rigid structure there is — it's why frames and bridges are trussed with triangles, not flat bars. So when something presses on the nail, that braced shape carries the load down through itself instead of letting the layer flex until it cracks. Past your fingertip, where the nail has no support of its own, that bracing is the whole difference: built flat, a little length just flexes and snaps; built on the apex, it stays firm.
Strong material, in the strongest shape — one bonded shell, built on an apex and cured all the way through. That's what carries a full 4 weeks of real wear. Dip is an overlay that strengthens your own nail, not built for dramatic length — but a little past your fingertip, built on the apex, it holds.
Shown in Raspberry Ripple
See how the apex is built
Apex vs. flat
A gentle curve — not flat.
Same thickness, same color — just a slight, even curve across the top. That curve is what carries the load; flat just flexes, and flexing is what cracks.
Every ingredient, explained
What's in it
Grouped by how long each one actually stays in contact with you — what becomes the layer, what evaporates as it dries, and the one product that never touches the nail.
Becomes the layer — stays on for the full 4 weeks
Evaporates as it dries — carries the actives, then leaves
Never touches you — cleans the brush only
For sensitive skin
We removed the #1 reason skin reacts to a manicure.
If a manicure has ever left your skin itchy or sore, or your nails lifting, the usual culprit is HEMA — the most common nail allergen. It isn't in anything we make. For most people who've struggled before, that one change is the whole difference.
Our dip sets with a cyanoacrylate bond — a chemistry with a long, trusted track record. The same family of adhesive is what the FDA cleared to close surgical incisions and skin wounds, and versions of it have been used in medicine for decades. It's well understood, and millions of people wear it comfortably.
And the formula stays clean. We leave out HEMA — the allergen behind most nail reactions — along with the other reactive monomers that tend to cause trouble. For the overwhelming majority of people, that adds up to a completely uneventful manicure. If your skin reacts easily, or a nail product has bothered you before, check with your doctor before you start — they know your history best.
Using it well
Simple, sensible handling
Used the normal way, none of this is any trouble. The main thing to know is the powder is very fine — so keep a little airflow and avoid breathing in the loose dust. A few sensible habits keep it simple.
Keep the dip liquids cool, out of direct sun, with the caps closed. They're flammable, so keep them away from open flame — and they'll stay fresher stored this way.
Work near an open window or in an airy room — the solvents have a noticeable smell as they flash off, and good airflow keeps it comfortable. Best practice: pop on a face mask, especially while you file.
Avoid splashes to the eyes, and rinse with water if it happens. The base coat is a fast-bonding adhesive, so if it touches skin, don't pull it apart — soak in warm, soapy water and it releases on its own.
Store everything where kids can't get to it, and treat it like any other salon liquid in the house — for grown-up hands only.
Now you know what's in it.
HEMA-free, no lamp, nothing hidden. Our starter kits include everything to apply and remove a set at home.