NOTD: Pink and olive dry water marble

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How to cite: Wong M. NOTD: Pink and olive dry water marble. Lab Muffin Beauty Science. February 10, 2012. Accessed December 22, 2023. https://labmuffin.com/notd-pink-and-olive-dry-water-marble/

This is going to be a long post! This was my first attempt at doing a dry water marble, and I learned a LOT, so I decided to record absolutely EVERYTHING, even the things that should be really obvious. It took me hours despite reading everything I could get my hands on. Hopefully this will help any water marbling newbies out there ๐Ÿ™‚

Dry water marbling (a la this tutorial on More Nail Polish) is less stressful and time-consuming than the traditional method, since itโ€™s spread over two sessions and thereโ€™s no nail polish drying on your nails while youโ€™re trying to do a million other things.

Learn from my (many) fails!

(right hand)

1. Water Marbling

I used the bottom half of a polystyrene cup, filled with filtered water. I ended up using China Glaze Awakening and Wagon Wheel after trying out a lot of polishes. If you havenโ€™t already, check out My Simple Little Pleasures for expert dragging videos.

โ€“ Polishes that dry quickly are a no-no. This means I basically canโ€™t use any of my beloved ulta3s (sob). They wrinkle when you drag a toothpick through them, and the polish doesnโ€™t โ€œspreadโ€ the same. (Iโ€™m thinking of changing the solvents in the ulta3s to slower drying ones in the future since 90% of my collection is ulta3.) Basically โ€“ if it wrinkles, give up.

โ€“ Drop the polishes onto the water gently i.e. close to the surface. I actually touched the droplets to the water gently. If you drop them from too high up the drop will sink to the bottom and make a hole in your cup, and suddenly your lap will be full of water.

โ€“ Donโ€™t start dragging from outside the โ€œcircleโ€ of polish. Dip your pointy stick in the middle of the outer band of colour. Otherwise your pattern will start rotating around your cup uncontrollably.

โ€“ Drag smoothly at a constant speed to minimise โ€œwiggleโ€.

โ€“ If your first drop of polish doesnโ€™t โ€œspreadโ€ right (looks more like a star than a circle), run your pointy stick around the edge of the cup and it should expand nicely. (Some people use a drop of polish to โ€œcleanโ€ the surfaceโ€ฆ I felt like it was a waste ๐Ÿ™ )

2. Picking Up the Design With Plastic

I used 4 cm wide circles with little tabs cut from old plastic document sleeves.

โ€“ Lifting the plastic from the water very slowly and smoothly will minimise water droplets (I originally thought fast would be betterโ€ฆ no)

โ€“ Leaving the plastic in the cup for a bit before you lift it out helps prevent the pattern folding over.

Transferring the Dry Design

I did one nail at a time. With practice, maybe I can do a few at once, but not for a while in my caseโ€ฆ

โ€“ Store the circles carefully โ€“ if they move around too much, the polish will flake off, and if you put two dried polish surfaces together, theyโ€™ll stick and you wonโ€™t be able to separate them.

โ€“ Cut little rectangles of nice design to fit over your nails. I could get 2 or 3 out of each circle.

โ€“ Paint a nail with base polish and let it dry for a few minutes. I used Awakening again.

โ€“ You want the layer of pattern thatโ€™s closest to the plastic to be dry when you peel the plastic off. That means you have to either: 1. work quickly so the new polish doesnโ€™t re-wet the pattern, or; 2. wait ages so it all dries before you peel it off. Iโ€™m impatient, so I picked the first option, but I worked too slowly a few times and the patterns got wet and separated like pizza cheese (see e.g. side of right thumb).

โ€“ My nails are more like bits of globes rather than bits of cylinders, so the flat pattern didnโ€™t stick perfectly onto the nail. Putting top coat on helped stick the patterns on, but putting on Seche Vite immediately caused crazy bubbling (see e.g. right hand). Sally Hansen Insta-Dri, then Seche Vite seemed to work better (see e.g. left hand)

โ€“ Peeling the plastic off quickly is harder than it sounds! Separating a corner of polish from the plastic before putting the pattern on the nail made it a lot easier.

โ€“ I tried to use a nail file to file off the pattern that was hanging over the free edge, but using a clean-up brush loaded with acetone is more foolproof.

(left hand)

Itโ€™s not perfect, but I think itโ€™s pretty good for my first attempt โ€“ hopefully Iโ€™ll improve next time!


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20 thoughts on “NOTD: Pink and olive dry water marble”

  1. That’s interesting! I’ve never heard of a dry water marble before. I’ve done a couple of water-marbled NOTD before on my blog! But I’ve used Ulta3 in one of them? Love water marbling. It’s a lot of effort, but the designs look great ๐Ÿ™‚

    Reply
    • I think some of the slower-drying ulta3s would work, especially if I had more practice and could work quicker… but I couldn’t be bothered going through my whole collection! I’ve seen some of the neon ones used before, but all the ones I tried (from memory: Gold Rush Fever, Sizzling Red, Twilight Fever… and a few more) dried way too quickly, which is usually what I look for in a polish, just not for marbling!

      Reply

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