Honestly, as a beginner (I work only on myself, I don't do clients) I prefer the ceramic one. I just purchased it recently, and to be honest I find it much, much easier to remove gel and polygel with ceramic. I have to mention that I also have a pretty cheap electric file, so the rotations aren't the best, so ceramic works for lower rotations a bit better from my experience. I started with Carbide, but it just requires a bit more pressure applied, and I just can't work as good with it, because it needs a bit more pressure to remove the product, and instead of removing it properly, (from base to tip) I would end up doing small bumps all over the nail, and finish it with hand file. But with ceramic, I got it right from the first time, cleanly filing the nails.
I'm an amature doing my two daughters nails and my own. Though I still struggle I have learned soooo much from you. Your videos are very informative. Thank you very much for everything you have taught me.
This was tremendously helpful to me. I’m so glad I watched. Every question I ever asked and some I never did were answered. I’ll definitely be saving this to refer back to on my nail journey. Thank you so much.
I just love the 5 in one carbide bit! I have it in blue and I’ve just got the green one. It is fantastic for diyers since it rotates in foward and reverse mode equally fine!
I need to get a decent drill that actually goes both directions. I'm cheap so I have the $7-$13 'etcher pen' style that goes in one direction only. And because of that, you twist it around and then need a new drill in six months when the cord rips apart.
@@Saitaina oh my!! Efiles are about $30-$100 for decent DIY ones... not hundreds 💜💖💜my 1st was a $30 one..still works...just bulky.. MelodySusie (aka AIRSEE are the same, my favorite ) n Modelones ( NAT PLUS) both have good ones for home use.. i have a few videos up on them..most with discount codes😉 Always search TH-cam for codes m reviews ...loads of review videos have codes to save money 😉
I have really thin nail plates, and when I used carbide bits, no matter how quickly I moved, they burned an created rings of fire. As soon as I switched to a ceramic cone bit, the burning stopped. Now that I only use those, my nails are healthy again.
@@zitlalycmartinez5362 I don't use them on bare nails. I'm talking about using them to remove product. Carbide bits burn even through product. I'm sorry I didn't make that clear.
I always get so excited to see you uploaded a new video. Thank you so much for your hard work! So side note, can we do a q&a for you about life? I am so interested to know how things are in your country right now and your life. I just love you. ❤️ You make people so happy! Please stay safe Anastasia. 🤩Xo
Thank you for this video, I just received my first DIY drill. You have educated me on my new blue band, curved ceramic bit. Glad to know they sent a good one.
Thank you for the information 😊❤️ Also your client has beautiful natural nails beneath the product so clean and such a white tip. Obviously a good nail tech helps maintain those nails too😊✌🏻
I'm sorry about my English, I use the Google translator. Thank you so much for explaining indirectly what I pay to have directly in courses in Brazil. No teacher had explained to me, directly, when would be the best time to use the soak off removal method and you did it magnificently when even if that wasn't the focus. It was against what I imagined, but I wasn't sure. Anastasia, Latin American countries lack excellent teachers like you. In the future would there be the possibility of your courses having spanish subtitles? I'm a freshly trained manicure and had a bad experience with carbide drills. I got hurt and I got scared. When I used a ceramic drill, I felt comfortable and confident to perform the removal. Both drills, carbide and ceramic, are red band due to my level of professionalism. You're great, Anastasia! Kisses from Brazil 😘
Hopefully, you can translate this as I no Habla Espanol. If you're nervous about the carbide due to injury, go slow with it. I have nicked and dented myself a LOT with it while learning (in fact I have a divet in my index right now due to my ceramic slipping and hitting the nail plate...yeah, it hurt). Low speed, slow movements (steady, smooth) and you'll get your confidence back. Just keep the speed enough that you don't send the drill spinning around the finger (I have also done that...a lot). I'm sorry your teachers are bad in Brazil...not something we would think of since the image many Americans have of Brazil is good nails, good hair, put-together women. TH-cam auto-captions can often help if you're watching a video on the site (not ALWAYS accurate, but you can get the idea) as well as of course, Google Translate (though I know it's never fun to try to type what someone is saying). Good luck with your career!
@@Saitaina Thank you for the words! Yes, here in Brazil we have great care with appearance, but "russian manicure" is still new in these lands, along with gel polish. Gel polish is not yet popular here, it is surrounded by prejudices (which spoils the nails). In contrast, lengthening of nails is part of everyday life, but what predominates is the technique that uses fiberglass. Again, people are prejudiced against lengthening using only gel or acrylic (because it is very rigid and the smell of the monomer). Dual forms and polygel? No way! The "professionals" detonate the technique without even mastering it. Reason? Preconception. They say it has no durability, that they break easily and blah blah blah... Brazil has a gigantic industry in the area of beauty and aesthetics, but I realize that in the world of nails (my world), national brands stopped in time. And it is these brands and their influencers that dictate the rules. And as for teachers... Well, as the dry manicure technique is new (in Brazil), there are few instructors really trained to teach. I learn a lot more on Anastasia's channel than with the courses I have paid for in Brazil with the most skilled instructors of this technique, do you believe? If you are a person who has the ability to interpret texts, like me, you can extract from this video what no Brazilian instructor teaches. There is no quality content on the internet in Portuguese (my language) that talks about dry manicure, correct use of drill bits. There is a flood of online courses on nail lengthening using fiberglass. They teach how to apply, how to make the filling, maintain the length (refill)... But I haven't seen a course that teaches the correct removal, both of lengthening and gel polish. Quality content I see that there are in Russian (but I don't understand), English (I understand about 60 ~ 70%) and Spanish (thanks God for Portuguese and Spanish being brother languages 🙏). Once again, thank you for the words of support. Thankfully, there are English subtitles on TH-cam. 😘
@@priscilasilvanails6597 Anastasia also has online course through www.nailsproacademy.com lot's of awesome classes!! Free webinars once in a while too. She's amazing 💜💖💜
@@nailsofinterest Yes, Anastasia is amazing! Her courses are on my list of priorities and I always watched the free webinar. One day I will have the pleasure of meeting Anastasia in person 🥰
I like a mix of both ceramic and carbide. I have very tight 'V' curves on a few of my nails, so I have to file those on an angle as the curve is so steep. A tapered carbide barrel gets those straight edges better than a ceramic bit can. However! Once that first layer is filed off, I swap to a ceramic full barrel to go straight down that middle. 1 minute and job done!
So the yellows are used for shaping, I just got my efile, and I am trying to learn all I can about using it. I tried to find this kind of information prior and couldn't Thank You so much, you are such a great help to us DIY'ers! Much 💘!
It looked like the ceramic bits worked better at taking the product off. It looked cleaner after and more effortless. Thank you for this information...
Wow a nail tech that sounds intelligent 👌🏼 Very good teacher👍🏼❣️ That second carbide bit looks nice, you can see the area you’re working on better compared to a Safety or square bit i think? You work very precise and gentle, i would feel very comfortable as a cliënt. My nailtech and friend works very fast and not so gentle, most work that way and i don’t like it so i do my own nails now.
I can feel and hear a LARGE difference between my carbide and ceramic, but I think that is because I change out my dip acrylic colour every three-five days so I'm more used to how they feel/sound then a client who comes in once every three weeks or more. I got some cheap carbides on Amazon (my 'main' needs replacement) and they're good..but laughable when it comes to acrylic and dip removal (it took about as long as soaking would). Definitely keeping them for gel removal, but yeah, buyer beware on some bits (and before someone says it, my main carbide that eats through acrylic like butter was ALSO a cheap boy from Wish, I was just being impatient this time and not wanting to wait the month+ for it to come from China, especially right now when ALL my lead times are months out on my usual products thanks to Covid screwing with manufacturing and shipping).
I use ceramic an carbide since the work the best on product, for me, then I like the diamond on a low low speed when prepping the natural nail. I AM NOT A PROFESSIONAL NOR HAVE I EVER BEEN TRAINED TO BE A TECH. I just wanted to put that out there, I am learning thru the past 3 years actually more than that with an e-file but it's been about a year with polygel an I'm getting there not great but definitely not bad hahaha
@@_st4rgir111 Sometimes it's fun to be negative, but I generally reserve that for idiots on Twitter. It's about your mindset, how you're raised and what's going on emotionally. People are often negative because they themselves are down and subconsciously want to damage others (or consciously, we call them dicks).
I usually use the cone shape with blue-Abrasive to remove the bulk of the product! I am dreadful at using the needle bits around the cuticles as part of prep! 🤣🤣🤣
@@evan180707 PANA Purple Tornado Nail Carbide Bit - Two Way Rotate Use for Both Left to Right Handed - 3/32” Shank -Fast Remove Acrylic or Hard Gels (Purple, Extra Coarse - XC
Both. I go with both. I'm not as fond of my ceramic as I am my carbide, but I'm not fond of the whole set I got that came with them. They're not strong enough to deal with my acrylic/dip (compare five mins per finger to three with my main carbide), but they're good at under nail, tips and would probably rock on softer gels (I'm currently wearing acrylic with a dip overlay so I can't test it...plus out of every gel except polish for some reason-need to pay attention to that). If you're an ammi doing your own nails (not a pro), I recommend a long, skinny ceramic for under nails, a needlepoint diamond, a rounded or flat top carbide (product removal), the ball diamond (one big, one little), and a tiny cuticle diamond. These are my most used.
If anyone can help I would appreciate a lot : if I take off the coloured ring (which marks the abrasiveness ) of the ceramic bits , could these be air dry sterilized ? I mean in the box at +/- 180° ? . Thank you
Can anyone help me? How do I know which direction to use for which side of the nail? My file doesn't have arrows, just setting 1 and 2. I'm so confused😕 I cant even figure out which way is which, let alone knowing which way to use when🤷♀️🤦♀️ I need help😁
@@levertarpkars7678 yeah I guess I'll get used to it. I'm assuming that when it wants to skip up and off my nail, its the wrong direction. Thanks for replying
Bah, they're not the devil. Builder gel is the devil (how the eff did I get it on my keyboard?! HOW DID IT TRY TO MY KEYBOARD?! - actual occurrence the day after messing with some, it hardened due to having a small, open light and my living room is very UV happy). Though I will say I had more accidents with my ceramic this week then my carbide, they spun around the nail and diverted my nails due to mishandling.
Honestly, as a beginner (I work only on myself, I don't do clients) I prefer the ceramic one. I just purchased it recently, and to be honest I find it much, much easier to remove gel and polygel with ceramic.
I have to mention that I also have a pretty cheap electric file, so the rotations aren't the best, so ceramic works for lower rotations a bit better from my experience.
I started with Carbide, but it just requires a bit more pressure applied, and I just can't work as good with it, because it needs a bit more pressure to remove the product, and instead of removing it properly, (from base to tip) I would end up doing small bumps all over the nail, and finish it with hand file.
But with ceramic, I got it right from the first time, cleanly filing the nails.
I thought I was the only one who only does work on themselves lol
Thanks you really helped me God bless you I’m starting my nail care now and I didn’t know which one to get
Yes! Carbide is hard to work with! Ceramic on the other hand, got the job done on the first try
I have never know what the colors meant!! Thank you for sharing your knowledge with us 😀
“She’s moving to help her friend!”
You’re so darn cute!!
I said the same with a loud laugh! Love people that are so true to themselves. Bless You ~
I'm an amature doing my two daughters nails and my own. Though I still struggle I have learned soooo much from you. Your videos are very informative. Thank you very much for everything you have taught me.
This was tremendously helpful to me. I’m so glad I watched. Every question I ever asked and some I never did were answered. I’ll definitely be saving this to refer back to on my nail journey. Thank you so much.
Not only do you create beautiful nails but you always look great Anastasia, your a natural beauty. Thanks for the great video as always!
I just love the 5 in one carbide bit! I have it in blue and I’ve just got the green one. It is fantastic for diyers since it rotates in foward and reverse mode equally fine!
I need to get a decent drill that actually goes both directions. I'm cheap so I have the $7-$13 'etcher pen' style that goes in one direction only. And because of that, you twist it around and then need a new drill in six months when the cord rips apart.
Saitaina Malfoy try a melody Suzy e-file, they’re not expense but they are a great product.
@@Saitaina oh my!! Efiles are about $30-$100 for decent DIY ones... not hundreds 💜💖💜my 1st was a $30 one..still works...just bulky.. MelodySusie (aka AIRSEE are the same, my favorite ) n Modelones ( NAT PLUS) both have good ones for home use.. i have a few videos up on them..most with discount codes😉
Always search TH-cam for codes m reviews ...loads of review videos have codes to save money 😉
I have really thin nail plates, and when I used carbide bits, no matter how quickly I moved, they burned an created rings of fire. As soon as I switched to a ceramic cone bit, the burning stopped.
Now that I only use those, my nails are healthy again.
I also have super thin nail plates and know that awful burning feeling. definitely going to get a ceramic bit thank you!
@@january3143 yeah, they have been so much better for me! I think you'll like them a lot better!
You should not be using either of those on your national nails
@@zitlalycmartinez5362 I don't use them on bare nails. I'm talking about using them to remove product. Carbide bits burn even through product. I'm sorry I didn't make that clear.
I always get so excited to see you uploaded a new video. Thank you so much for your hard work! So side note, can we do a q&a for you about life? I am so interested to know how things are in your country right now and your life. I just love you. ❤️ You make people so happy! Please stay safe Anastasia. 🤩Xo
Thank you for this video, I just received my first DIY drill. You have educated me on my new blue band, curved ceramic bit. Glad to know they sent a good one.
I love a fluted carbide for bulk removal or lift removal. Diamond cuticle bits. Rarely use my ceramic or mandrel anymore. Thanks for sharing 💜💖💜
Finally !!!!!!! Finally I find the explanations to the world of bits ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️💅💅💅💅💅💅 Thanks!!! Thank you!!!!
Thank you for the information 😊❤️
Also your client has beautiful natural nails beneath the product so clean and such a white tip.
Obviously a good nail tech helps maintain those nails too😊✌🏻
I'm sorry about my English, I use the Google translator.
Thank you so much for explaining indirectly what I pay to have directly in courses in Brazil. No teacher had explained to me, directly, when would be the best time to use the soak off removal method and you did it magnificently when even if that wasn't the focus. It was against what I imagined, but I wasn't sure.
Anastasia, Latin American countries lack excellent teachers like you. In the future would there be the possibility of your courses having spanish subtitles?
I'm a freshly trained manicure and had a bad experience with carbide drills. I got hurt and I got scared. When I used a ceramic drill, I felt comfortable and confident to perform the removal. Both drills, carbide and ceramic, are red band due to my level of professionalism.
You're great, Anastasia!
Kisses from Brazil 😘
Hopefully, you can translate this as I no Habla Espanol.
If you're nervous about the carbide due to injury, go slow with it. I have nicked and dented myself a LOT with it while learning (in fact I have a divet in my index right now due to my ceramic slipping and hitting the nail plate...yeah, it hurt). Low speed, slow movements (steady, smooth) and you'll get your confidence back. Just keep the speed enough that you don't send the drill spinning around the finger (I have also done that...a lot).
I'm sorry your teachers are bad in Brazil...not something we would think of since the image many Americans have of Brazil is good nails, good hair, put-together women. TH-cam auto-captions can often help if you're watching a video on the site (not ALWAYS accurate, but you can get the idea) as well as of course, Google Translate (though I know it's never fun to try to type what someone is saying).
Good luck with your career!
@@Saitaina Thank you for the words!
Yes, here in Brazil we have great care with appearance, but "russian manicure" is still new in these lands, along with gel polish. Gel polish is not yet popular here, it is surrounded by prejudices (which spoils the nails). In contrast, lengthening of nails is part of everyday life, but what predominates is the technique that uses fiberglass. Again, people are prejudiced against lengthening using only gel or acrylic (because it is very rigid and the smell of the monomer). Dual forms and polygel? No way! The "professionals" detonate the technique without even mastering it. Reason? Preconception. They say it has no durability, that they break easily and blah blah blah...
Brazil has a gigantic industry in the area of beauty and aesthetics, but I realize that in the world of nails (my world), national brands stopped in time. And it is these brands and their influencers that dictate the rules.
And as for teachers... Well, as the dry manicure technique is new (in Brazil), there are few instructors really trained to teach. I learn a lot more on Anastasia's channel than with the courses I have paid for in Brazil with the most skilled instructors of this technique, do you believe? If you are a person who has the ability to interpret texts, like me, you can extract from this video what no Brazilian instructor teaches.
There is no quality content on the internet in Portuguese (my language) that talks about dry manicure, correct use of drill bits. There is a flood of online courses on nail lengthening using fiberglass. They teach how to apply, how to make the filling, maintain the length (refill)... But I haven't seen a course that teaches the correct removal, both of lengthening and gel polish. Quality content I see that there are in Russian (but I don't understand), English (I understand about 60 ~ 70%) and Spanish (thanks God for Portuguese and Spanish being brother languages 🙏).
Once again, thank you for the words of support. Thankfully, there are English subtitles on TH-cam. 😘
@@priscilasilvanails6597 Anastasia also has online course through www.nailsproacademy.com lot's of awesome classes!! Free webinars once in a while too. She's amazing 💜💖💜
@@nailsofinterest Yes, Anastasia is amazing! Her courses are on my list of priorities and I always watched the free webinar. One day I will have the pleasure of meeting Anastasia in person 🥰
Great video as always. Its good to hear advice from a pro, you learn so much. Kisses from Greece 🇬🇷❤😚
Thank you!
I like a mix of both ceramic and carbide. I have very tight 'V' curves on a few of my nails, so I have to file those on an angle as the curve is so steep. A tapered carbide barrel gets those straight edges better than a ceramic bit can. However! Once that first layer is filed off, I swap to a ceramic full barrel to go straight down that middle. 1 minute and job done!
Your explanations are among the best along with your show of skills. Thank you for sharing ❤️
So the yellows are used for shaping, I just got my efile, and I am trying to learn all I can about using it. I tried to find this kind of information prior and couldn't Thank You so much, you are such a great help to us DIY'ers! Much 💘!
It looked like the ceramic bits worked better at taking the product off. It looked cleaner after and more effortless. Thank you for this information...
Looooove your hair and hair colour 😍 tanks for another informative video 👏
Great video. Thanks for always giving good advice and honest information
Thank you!
I also get excited when u upload a new video. I just love watching u do nails and all the good info. Also love all the music on ur channel.
Wow a nail tech that sounds intelligent 👌🏼 Very good teacher👍🏼❣️
That second carbide bit looks nice, you can see the area you’re working on better compared to a Safety or square bit i think? You work very precise and gentle, i would feel very comfortable as a cliënt. My nailtech and friend works very fast and not so gentle, most work that way and i don’t like it so i do my own nails now.
I use ceramic if I don’t have to much time but if I have plenty of time I use carbide.
Either one it’s ok by me
Thank you for your videos
It so satisfying to watch 😍 i really love your voice, and knowledge you gives is bonus 🥰
Great video lots of information. Thank you for sharing this.
I bought a ceramic safety bit coarse for acrylic removal and it's pretty good, but I really prefer my carbide bits
Thanks for this video! I’ve learned so much from you!
Great video and so helpful!
I can feel and hear a LARGE difference between my carbide and ceramic, but I think that is because I change out my dip acrylic colour every three-five days so I'm more used to how they feel/sound then a client who comes in once every three weeks or more.
I got some cheap carbides on Amazon (my 'main' needs replacement) and they're good..but laughable when it comes to acrylic and dip removal (it took about as long as soaking would). Definitely keeping them for gel removal, but yeah, buyer beware on some bits (and before someone says it, my main carbide that eats through acrylic like butter was ALSO a cheap boy from Wish, I was just being impatient this time and not wanting to wait the month+ for it to come from China, especially right now when ALL my lead times are months out on my usual products thanks to Covid screwing with manufacturing and shipping).
Saitaina Malfoy yeah the lead time on wish is ridiculous, I wait at least 6 weeks and the longest delivery was 10 weeks, I live in Ireland.
My sister always tells me the ceramic bits feel smoother when filing off product. She prefers them for that reason.
This was so helpful thank you !💕
I use ceramic an carbide since the work the best on product, for me, then I like the diamond on a low low speed when prepping the natural nail. I AM NOT A PROFESSIONAL NOR HAVE I EVER BEEN TRAINED TO BE A TECH. I just wanted to put that out there, I am learning thru the past 3 years actually more than that with an e-file but it's been about a year with polygel an I'm getting there not great but definitely not bad hahaha
May your haters live long so they can witness your success.
-The Shades
Omg ur awesome 👏🏻
@@_st4rgir111 thanks
It’s true there needs to be more people like u too many negative people nowadays😣
@@_st4rgir111 Sometimes it's fun to be negative, but I generally reserve that for idiots on Twitter. It's about your mindset, how you're raised and what's going on emotionally. People are often negative because they themselves are down and subconsciously want to damage others (or consciously, we call them dicks).
Saitaina Malfoy OMG your so right omg ur a.... idk ur just awesome lol
I usually use the cone shape with blue-Abrasive to remove the bulk of the product! I am dreadful at using the needle bits around the cuticles as part of prep! 🤣🤣🤣
Thanks I appreciate the tutorial you're doing an amazing job ❤
Learning is the best
I used both but I prefer carbide bits.. I found one in Amazon it's amazing.
Could you share the link please x
@@evan180707 PANA Purple Tornado Nail Carbide Bit - Two Way Rotate Use for Both Left to Right Handed - 3/32” Shank -Fast Remove Acrylic or Hard Gels (Purple, Extra Coarse - XC
Thank you for that cause i was a bit confused.sorry (for that pon )lol with the the carbide and ceramic diffrences. And which one to purchase.🤔
Both. I go with both. I'm not as fond of my ceramic as I am my carbide, but I'm not fond of the whole set I got that came with them. They're not strong enough to deal with my acrylic/dip (compare five mins per finger to three with my main carbide), but they're good at under nail, tips and would probably rock on softer gels (I'm currently wearing acrylic with a dip overlay so I can't test it...plus out of every gel except polish for some reason-need to pay attention to that).
If you're an ammi doing your own nails (not a pro), I recommend a long, skinny ceramic for under nails, a needlepoint diamond, a rounded or flat top carbide (product removal), the ball diamond (one big, one little), and a tiny cuticle diamond. These are my most used.
Love watching your videos tysmfs 💙💖
Are ceramic bits suited for both left and right handed?
Great information!
So what do recommend ceramic carbid ?!!
May i know at what rotation do u use to file off the product?
I’d love to have my nails done by you 😭💜
do you recommend green or blue for taking off the gel? or does it really depend on if it‘s ceramic or carbide?
Is there any way to prevent the heat from the drill on nail or its normal while removing gel color??
That means you're leaving the drill bit in that spot too long
Removal is so satisfying watching the design just disappear
True :)
good day :)
what bits did you use for exceed poly gel underneath the nails?
Thank you!
I was lead to believe that carbide bits are better on acrylic and ceramics are better on gel. I have to agree
Also, hard gel can't be soaked off. Not all the materials used for nails jave an option to be soaked off.
And that's good. We should leave acetone for efiles. Much safer better and healthier
What would be the best bit for clean out underneath the nail?
Needle shaped carbide or any similar shape
Right (dominant hand) forward? Left hand reverse?
If anyone can help I would appreciate a lot : if I take off the coloured ring (which marks the abrasiveness ) of the ceramic bits , could these be air dry sterilized ? I mean in the box at +/- 180° ? . Thank you
Omg I’m early!!! Omg you are so your pretty!!! Omg! Anyway stay safe!!!😘♥️💫♾
Also if you have any pets can you show us please!!!
where did u buy the blue carbide bit?
Thanks for sharing this video. 💅👍🙋♀️
which e files do you use?
Thankyou
I have no idea the band colors meant something
lol ceramic one is coarse vs carbide medium . of course the ceramic will take the powder off faster
Can anyone help me? How do I know which direction to use for which side of the nail? My file doesn't have arrows, just setting 1 and 2. I'm so confused😕 I cant even figure out which way is which, let alone knowing which way to use when🤷♀️🤦♀️ I need help😁
fairy changeling you could just try and see what works. One direction will be effective and the other will be ineffective.
@@levertarpkars7678 yeah I guess I'll get used to it. I'm assuming that when it wants to skip up and off my nail, its the wrong direction. Thanks for replying
@@fairychangeling8337 from the videos I've watched, I always see them filing in the opposite direction the bit is spinning.
@@Erica_Love_Love thank you I'll try that.❤
In Israel carbide bits are more expensive:0
Ceramic bits are the devil! 👿 I hate them!
Carbide bits are the way to go. 😊✌🏻
Why? :)
Bah, they're not the devil. Builder gel is the devil (how the eff did I get it on my keyboard?! HOW DID IT TRY TO MY KEYBOARD?! - actual occurrence the day after messing with some, it hardened due to having a small, open light and my living room is very UV happy).
Though I will say I had more accidents with my ceramic this week then my carbide, they spun around the nail and diverted my nails due to mishandling.
I adore ceramic bits. Ceramic and diamond bits are the only kind I use.
💖💅
Sock off. Lol. Lo
Literally 😂
The problem with you guys on TH-cam you show products but never name it so we can buy it!!!!