Help me narrow down my cart?

Help me narrow down my cart?

Trying some fragrances from oil perfumery for the first time and was wondering if anyone here has tried these before. I have several in my cart that sound good but want to narrow it down to 2 just to try. Welcome to any suggestions!

u/Mal6625 — 1 day ago
▲ 3 r/tiedye

Solid colour dye?

Currently on a mission to update my wardrobe without buying anything, so basically upcycljng with stuff I already have. Found some small bottles of alcohol inks that I want to use to dye a white tank top a solid colour - what would be the best way of going about this? I know I could just buy fabric dye but again, trying to use what i have. Could I just put the ink in a water bath and dip the whole shirt? Tia!

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u/Mal6625 — 25 days ago

Nailstuff quick dry top coat?

Thinking about placing my first nail stuff order because of glitch's pride collection and was wondering if I should try out their top coat, since some reviews rate it pretty well. I use essie gel couture top coat right now and love everything but the shrinkage - it seems like no matter how careful I am or whether or not I cap my free edge, I still get shrinkage once the bottle is even a third used.

Was wondering if anyone here has used it before and can attest to the quality! Thanks in advance :)

Current mani: 1x essie to the rescue, 1x inspired sense drifting away, 1x essie gel couture tc

u/Mal6625 — 1 month ago

Basically the title. I try my best to live by reduce reuse and recycle and cotton rounds is the one manicure step I always feel a little bad about. I have short nails and typically use 1x ridge filling base coat, 2x colour, 1x top coat and I feel like I have to use at minimum 2 or 3 cotton rounds to get the previous polish off. I used to peel my polish off but I'm trying be gentler to my nails by holding an acitone soaked cotton round on each for 30 seconds instead, and I'm not interested in peely bases since I like to keep manicures for about 5 days.

How many do you use on average/is there something else that is more efficient? TIA

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u/Mal6625 — 2 months ago