You know that stuff is just repackaged paint stripper right? The ones with ingredients listed you can compare the ingredients. Many available online too are fakes and are not sold through stores that are real (like Sephora, Ulta, etc.) That stuff is NOT good for your nails!
Just buy straight up ethyl acetate, and use in an extremy well ventilated area. It's one of the ingredients in nail polish and dissolves nail polish faster and better than acetone (especially on stamping plates). The same way any solvent, *including whatever is in that nail solvent product you use here,* is toxic to huff, the same way ethyl acetate is too which is why you always need to *apply polish in well ventilated areas,* and *remove polish in well ventilated areas.*
When Simply did their video a person who was getting their Ph.D. in Chemistry and found out the chemicals used to make. The candy thing is most likely the same thing but different branding.
@@laurac86 1) that highly depends on what the acetone free nail polish remover is formulated like, some are crap and some are great. 2) I said straight ethyl acetate. It cleans fine lined stamping plates better than pure acetone, in my experience. (No matter if you use pure acetone or pure ethyl acetate you do need to work in well ventilated areas.)
@@laurac86 to elaborate, acetone can chemically "clump" polish. It's easiest to see if you have two identical polishes, and you dilute one with pure acetone and one with pure ethyl acetate. This is also why you usually can't use acetone to dilute nail polish with unless you're doing it right before use and don't expect to get another use out of the remaining polish afterward that use.
@@Call-me-Al - Ohh okay I see thank you for educating me! I was just thinking of non acetone remover which I’ve never had luck with. I buy pure acetone from the beauty supply store which works great. Where can one find pure ethyl acetate?? I use actual polish thinner to thin mine but just out of curiosity can that be used as a thinner?
This company is really shady about this remover, they do not list what active ingredient alkali they are using in this product. That's like a food company that uses something as vague as "fruit" in the ingredients list of a juice....
It's a way to deflect responsibility here, I feel. She never stated what the active ingredient in the polish remover product was, just said "do your own research"
I looked up the ingredients list, and the company is intentionally avoiding to name the active ingredient. Sure sounds like they're using paint stripper and are trying to hide it.
Lmao girl thats paint stripper used for car wheels. No shit youre feeling that "cold and tightening sensation" because its toxic. Just use acetone (or even acetone free nail polish remover) or a peel off base coat, at least its alot more safer and cheaper
What's wrong with the traditional acetone nail paint remover. Works under 3 minutes and works like a charm. And has no side effects unless you use them every day.
Acetone would have been the best one to get it off smoothly and if you have a machine that helps to take the gel polish off it's even faster. 😁🙋🏻♀️🥰🤦🏻♀️😇🎆🥇🤓
@@artchick07 acetone is probably less dangerous than whatever this is. They do not list what the active ingredient is, only that it's a type of alkali. That is fishy and scummy as heck.
Please avoid it, they are not honest about the ingredients. Stick to reputable brands of acetone based remover that has a detailed list of exact ingredients or acetone free remover that has a detailed list of exact ingredients.
Just a reminder, this product is really sketchy, some people think it’s paint stripper, which is dangerously toxic! So avoid using this product as it may lead to serious injuries.
Or it could be your body‘s chemistry in the way it reacts with the gel which causes it to be easier to peel off. I know certain brands of regular nail polish peel off my nails much easier than others. I will say be careful peeling it because you are peeling off a bit of your natural nail as well
You never take a metal object and scrape your nail because that damages the actual Apex as well as the top half and middle center of a nail bed and sometimes the damage cannot just grow out and come back. Common Sense somebody should have told you you use a non-metal object from an orange wood stick to a cotton swab to take your polish off. And I'm speaking as 30 years as a licensed manicures I think I know a little bit more than a thing of two other than just the mere basics maybe because I went to school and learned how to do nails professionally that I should know what I'm talking about. Nothing wrong with taking your polish off but safety is key 😤😤🤦🏻♀️😵🤬🤯👎🏼💯‼️😲
I tend to agree out of hard learned lessons. I used fake whole nails put under cutical skin and then peeled them off instead of soaking off. OMG took several months to get huge dents and top layer of nails still crack and peel. Please listen to professionals before trying anything on your nails wish I had.
What I don’t understand about this video is her pushing down so hard it like the bones are going to pop out of her fingers. If that’s required, I’m not interested.