
[100% Off] Nail Stamping Secrets: From Polka Dots To Chrome
Nail Stamping Secrets: From Polka Dots to Chrome — Designs That Actually Work
Requirements
- A stamper (any brand works — I show technique on both firm and clear types)
- Stamping plates (I use MoYou London and Nicole Diary, but any plates work)
- Stamping polish or paint (regular polish doesn't work well — it dries too slow)
- Basic gel manicure setup if you want to do the chrome/foil/watercolor designs
Description
I’ve been doing stamping for years, and I still remember how frustrating it was at the beginning. Designs wouldn’t pick up. Lines came out broken. Geometric patterns looked like a mess. Sound familiar?
This mini-course is everything I wish someone had shown me when I started. Not theory — actual technique that works on real nails, with real clients, using plates you can buy on AliExpress or MoYou London.
Here’s what we’ll cover:
Two types of stampers and when to use each. The firm matte stamper I use 80% of the time — it gets closest to the cuticle and handles fine lines beautifully. The soft clear stamper for precise placement when you need to see exactly where the design lands.
Why your designs have broken lines (hint: you’re probably holding the stamper too long or pressing straight down instead of rolling). Why polka dots are actually one of the hardest patterns. Why shallow etching plates need speed, not pressure.
Gradient stamping with two or three colors — the scraper technique that actually blends without muddy edges. Reverse stamping for hand-painted looks without the hand-painting skill. Chrome powder, foil, and watercolor drops combined with stamping for designs that look complicated but take five minutes.
I show you my actual plates (Nicole Diary, MoYou London), the polish brands I trust (Kads, Eniq), and the mistakes I see techs make over and over. By the end, you’ll know which stamper to grab for which design — and your geometric patterns will finally come out straight.
Author(s): Yuliia Vel








