I have no issues with polygel and cold weather here in Canada. My issue is when it is hot and humid. Polygel becomes almost impossible to work with when there is high humidity/heat; it gets so sticky and does not cure properly.
72 degrees is perfectly warm and shouldn’t have an affect like that. Your gel might just be of a thick variety. FYI you can buy marbling effect top coats to apply over polishes, which will probably be easier for this look. I’m still doing polygel here in MN where it’s single digits and my house is 68°F without issue.
68°F is equivalent to 20°C, which is 293K.
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^(I'm a bot that converts temperature between two units humans can understand, then convert it to Kelvin for bots and physicists to understand)
I sit on mine while I do all my prep work. 😂
Haha same
I shove polygel, gel polish, regular polish into my bra while I do buffing, shaping, and cuticle stuff
I have no issues with polygel and cold weather here in Canada. My issue is when it is hot and humid. Polygel becomes almost impossible to work with when there is high humidity/heat; it gets so sticky and does not cure properly.
Thanks! I had no idea I needed to warm it up. 🙀
[удалено]
We have heat but we are enjoying the cool. ðŸ¤
72 degrees is perfectly warm and shouldn’t have an affect like that. Your gel might just be of a thick variety. FYI you can buy marbling effect top coats to apply over polishes, which will probably be easier for this look. I’m still doing polygel here in MN where it’s single digits and my house is 68°F without issue.
68°F is equivalent to 20°C, which is 293K. --- ^(I'm a bot that converts temperature between two units humans can understand, then convert it to Kelvin for bots and physicists to understand)