Posts Tagged ‘OPI’

Black Shatter – a guest review

April 28th, 2011

Thanks Vanessa who accosted me on the street and asked to do a guest post!

black shatter nailpolish and bottleAs a lifelong devourer of nails, it came as a surprise to me a few months ago that I could kick the habit in a couple of short weeks. My secret? Making them look sufficiently pretty that I wouldn’t want to tear them to pieces. And since then (aided by a surplus of time, due to looking for work) I have been rapidly advancing through Nails 101. Words like ‘jelly’, ‘cream’, and ‘matte’ have become a second language to me. (Although, to be fair, I’m not entirely sure what a jelly is, even though I do use the word).

I started keeping up with nail polish blogs, checking reviews on the polishes I had my eye on before buying them. And it was there I first started hearing murmurings of a mythical ‘shatter’ polish, a fluid of such beauty and novelty it seemed almost too good to be true. Until, one day, I came across a display in Farmers, and lo and behold, there it was. Or should have been, if it wasn’t sold out. A quick word with a salesperson confirmed that this had been the case almost immediately.

Since then, I have checked OPI stands across the country (well, in Auckland and Wellington) for the OPI Black Shatter, part of the Katy Perry collection. And it was in the Queen Street Farmers last week where it finally came to pass that I held one of my own in my hands.

As a connoisseur of cheaper nail polishes (amongst my favourites, Chi Chi’s $8 mini range) this is the most expensive polish I’ve ever bought, but man, was it fun. You need to use it with a coloured base coat – in my case, it was two coats of Chi Chi’s Cyberella (a metallic silver).

The polish itself is very thick and dries extremely quickly – so much that it gathers around the mouth of the bottle in a rather alarming fashion. Application is both tricky and non-demanding – swiping from the cuticle to the end of your nail often results in an uneven distribution of colour, with there never being enough on the brush to reach the end of the nail in an even fashion.

But that’s where the non-demanding part comes in – as the polish begins to crack and fragment, the evenness of the application begins to matter less. In general, I’d say if you’re looking for chunkier pieces of black, put it on thicker, but for a finer, more shattered look, a thin application is best. My application is on the chunkier side (and my apologies for the state of my nails; they’re recovering from years of neglect).

The look? When you’re not directly looking at it, it reminds me of animal print. Which is odd, because I’m not really down with the leopard skin. I’ve really enjoyed having it on my nails – it cheers me up every time I see it, and it is such a joy to apply.

If I ran out, would I buy it again? Possibly, but in a different colour, to mix things up a bit. I understand it is available in other colours overseas, but I haven’t seen it here yet.

OPI polishes are sold in a range of outlets, and Black Shatter retails for $26.90.

Review: 4 Season Nails

January 13th, 2010

For Xmas, my mother gave me a pedicure voucher, which was a lovely present. It was for a place in Johnsonville Mall, which is less lovely, but luckily that’s on the way to Lisa’s house.

Of course, for presents, you’re not supposed to know how much they cost, but I can tell you anyway that the pedicures at 4 Season Nails cost $45. Do I recommend them for your pedicure needs? No, I really don’t. The place is your standard mall nail bar, with manicure counters and some throne chairs with footbaths, and it reeks of chemicals. So far, so typical, and that’s fine, it’s not a place you’d spend forever in, unless you work there. But they also have a large flatscreen TV that was showing Honey on a loop, which would have been distracting enough for people who want to concentrate on their magazines (a couple of months out of date at that), but the girl who was working on my feet kept watching the screen instead of what she was doing, and given that she was attacking my cuticles with sharp metal things and I was crying out in pain, she really should have been paying more attention before she actually cut me and I yelped and started bleeding. Not cool. It was the most painful treatment I’ve ever had – the filing was really rough, she didn’t actually cut my nails (they were really long), just the skin around them, and the (threadbare) towel fell off the footrest so my feet were slipping around everywhere. The topcoat she used on the OPI polish must have been good cos my toes aren’t chipped two weeks later, but seriously, what was supposed to be a relaxing experience turned out to be all kinds of torture instead. It may have been the particular technician and not the place that sucked, but given that I didn’t get her name, I can’t tell you who to avoid, so I suggest just skipping the place altogether.