6 Tips On How To Mix Colors For Nail Art
Nail art is one of the best ways to practice genuine self-expression. And showing the outside world a bit about yourself is more powerful than you can imagine! Key...
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Need a little help?
We’re here to help you feel confident with nail stamping, from your very first pickup to more advanced techniques. Explore our free stamping course for step-by-step tutorials, tips, and guidance designed to help you create with success.
Nail stamping is a technique that transfers pre-designed patterns onto your nails using a stamping plate, stamper, and highly pigmented polish. Instead of painting designs by hand, you pick up the design from the plate and press it onto your nail, creating clean, detailed nail art in minutes.
Yes, you can stamp on top of gel, acrylic, or dip manicures. Nail stamping works on the surface of your nails, so the type of base underneath doesn’t matter as long as it’s fully dry or cured and smooth. This means you can easily add stamped designs over gel polish, acrylics, or dip powder to enhance or refresh your manicure without starting over.
Here are some simple tips we can offer for a stamping beginner:
We have hours of educational videos you can find on YouTube! Start with our beginners playlist to learn.
You can get started with one of our Starter Kits!
Some helpful tools include: 100% acetone and cotton pads to clean the plates, clear tape to clean the stamper, and some paper towels to help line your space for easy clean up.
Stamping polish dries quickly, so you should scrape the plate and pick up the design with the stamper within a few seconds. Practice stamping on a piece of paper first to get the technique down!
Yes. For best results, we recommend using 100% acetone as it will remove the polish and clean the plate without leaving any residue on the surface. We recommend using a cotton grabber tool, a nail art tweezer, or even clothes pin if you are in a pinch, to hold your cotton pad soaked with acetone to clean your plate so you don't accidentallly ruin your beautiful manicure while cleaning!
Maniology Pineapple Cotton Grabber
Stainless Steel Nail Art Pincher Tweezers Tool
Our rectangular nail stamping plates are 6.5cm x 12.6cm.
We have tons of nail designs that can work for larger or small nail beds. Images that are considered full nail are designs created to have full coverage over the nail in one stamp. These designs on average are 2.4cm x 1.5cm.
Stamping polish is formulated with higher pigment concentration and slightly thicker viscosity than regular nail polish. This allows the design to transfer cleanly from the plate and appear opaque when stamped onto the nail.
Yes! The main difference between stamping polish and regular nail polish is that stamping polish is usually thicker and is packed with pigment. Some regular polishes will work for stamping, but the results will vary and so will the opacity. Try with regular polishes that are opaque in 1 coat and they should work. Avoid sheer, glitter, or any specialty finishes as they will not work well.
Tip: Older nail polish tends to thicken up over time, use your old nail polish for stamping.
The simple answer is no. Gel polish (requires curing with a lamp) has a different viscosity, and it will not stamp a clear design. There are gel stamping polish that can work, but none of our polishes are gel.
Our Nail Lacquer is just regular nail polish meant for painting your nails as your base color or full manicure, while our stamping is specially formulated for nail stamping. Stamping polish is thicker and much more pigmented so it can pick up designs from a stamping plate and transfer them cleanly onto the nail without looking sheer or patchy. You can paint your nails with stamping polish if you want, but regular nail lacquer usually doesn’t work well for stamping because it’s not opaque enough. Neither of these are gel polishes; both are regular lacquers that air-dry and do not need a UV or LED lamp. A simple way to think of it is: use nail lacquer for your base color, and stamping art polish for the designs on top.
Stamping polishes tend to be thicker than regular nail polish so we recommend giving them a good shake up prior to use to help distribute all the pigments. This is especially important if it's been sitting in storage for a while. You can safely add a few drops of polish thinner to reconstitute any stamping polishes.
High-five! Maniology stamping polishes are 5-free. This means that our stamping polishes are not only made without 3 of the most common harmful chemicals:
found in many nail polishes. But we've given the boot to 2 other yucky chemicals as well:
These chemicals can be harmful to reproduction, developmental growth, and may even cause cancer with prolonged exposure. (Yikes!) Formaldehyde resin and camphor can cause allergic reactions like dermatitis, yellowing, and dried out nails. (No, thanks!)
Now, you can breathe easy with Maniology; scrape, stamp, and swoon to your heart’s content. We’re here to help you feel beautiful, look beautiful, and stay beautiful longer.
At Maniology, we love our furry, 4 legged friends and value the importance of recognizing and protecting the rights of all animals and the cruelty against them for animal testing. We do not test on animals nor commission any third party to test any of our products on animals. Our nail art brushes are also made of synthetic fibers and not animal fibers.
To preserve the clear property of your stamper, you will need to treat it gently with care. Using acetone on the stamper will wear it out quickly and cause it to become cloudy over time. To clean the surface of the stamper head, we recommend something sticky like: scotch tape, sticker type lint roller or our Sticky Stamper Station.
For our clear stampers, we recommend giving it a wash using mild dish soap, water and a light rub with your hand to get rid of any oily residue that occurs naturally from production and storage.
Do NOT file or buff the surface of our clear stampers. Our stamper heads can take a lot, but buffing it's surface may cause rips, tears or crumble the stamper head making it completely useless.
You can clean the scraper card just like the plate with 100% acetone. Since the scraper card is plastic, prolonged exposure to acetone will melt it, so do not let it soak!
The most common reason a stamper doesn’t pick up the design is that the stamping polish dries before the stamper makes contact with the plate.
Common causes
• scraping too hard
• waiting too long before picking up the design
• using regular nail polish, gel polish, or other polishes instead of stamping polish
• applying too much pressure with the stamper (don't press hard!)
• not cleaning the plate properly after every attempt.
• airflow from fans, heater, or air conditioning drying the polish faster
How to fix it
Helpful tip
Highly pigmented stamping polish, like Maniology stamping polish, transfers designs more easily because the formula is thicker and more opaque than regular nail polish.
Stamping designs can smear because the solvents in many regular top coats partially dissolve the stamping polish when brushed over the design. The pressure of the brush combined with the solvent can drag the still-delicate stamped image, causing lines to blur or streak.
How to prevent stamping from smearing
• Use a smudge-free top coat first. This type of top coat is formulated to seal the stamped design without dissolving it.
• Apply the first layer very lightly, letting the brush glide over the nail instead of dragging the brush.
• Allow the stamping polish to dry for a few seconds before applying top coat.
• After the smudge-free layer dries, you can apply a regular glossy or gel-like top coat for extra shine and durability.
Using a smudge-free top coat helps create a protective barrier over the stamped design so the details stay crisp and sharp.
If the design picks up on the stamper but doesn’t transfer well to the nail, the stamped image may be drying before it reaches the nail or the nail surface may not be ready.
Common causes
• Waiting too long before stamping onto the nail
• Uneven nail surface or oily nail plate
• Pressing too hard or stamping at the wrong angle
How to fix it
• Stamp the design onto the nail immediately after picking it up.
• Make sure your base polish is fully dry before stamping.
• Use a firm up and down motion to transfer the design evenly.
Patchy stamping usually happens when the design does not pick up enough polish from the plate.
Common causes
• Not applying enough polish to the design
• Scraping too hard and removing too much polish
• Using low-pigment or regular nail polish
• Uneven scraping angle
How to fix it
• Apply a generous amount of stamping polish over the design.
• Scrape lightly and only once. This is especially important on designs that are more intricate
• Use highly pigmented stamping polish for better coverage. Creme stamping polishes are preferred with intricate designs.
If stamping works inconsistently, it’s usually due to timing or environmental factors.
Common causes
• Working too slowly when picking up the design
• Airflow from fans, heater, or air conditioning drying the polish faster
• Too cold/too hot can affect results
• Uneven scraping pressure
• Using regular nail polish instead of stamping polish
How to fix it
• Work quickly after scraping the plate.
• Avoid stamping directly under strong airflow.
• Stamp in a room that is room temperature. A too cold/too hot room can affect results
• Scrape lightly with a consistent motion.
• Use highly pigmented stamping polish designed for stamping.
