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1 Year Supply of Laque Lift Shellac and Polish Remover Wipes $45 Delivered @ Laque Lift

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Gel nail polish and shellac remover - over ONE YEAR SUPPLY. 600 Wipes. Allows for 60 removals

The quickest, most nourishing way to remove gel nail polish (shellac, Gelish, OPI Gel etc) at home and get healthier nails.


This saves you from removing your gel nails at a salon ALL YEAR

Laque Lift's gel remover wipes are vanilla scented and help repair the damage caused by UV/LED light beds.

To remove your gel polish simply:

1) File down your top layer of gel shine

2) Open the wipe and peel off the sticky strip

3) Insert your fingers into the wipe pockets

4) Fold the wipes around your fingers and wait 10 minutes

5) Remove the wipes and scrape away the shellac with the cuticle stick supplied

Stop peeling. Starting lifting your gel polish

Visit www.laquelift.com.au for videos

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closed Comments

  • +1

    "quickest, most nourishing"
    Is your hair dead and lifeless?
    Good, we can cut it without you needing a general anaesthetic.
    By the time your nails are nails, the need for "nourishment" is well past.
    For those interested, it's buffered acetone with a bit of scent on a wipe.

  • Thanks for the insight Terry, however, nail beds (which are in fact alive) get damaged by UV lamps and removal as it lifts the first layer of your nail bed - making it raw and cracked.

    This product, which has collagen and hydrating oil, actually rebuilds the living nail bed cells.

    Cheers.

    • Sincere question - how does oil hydrate? I can understand moisturising but hydrating?

      • Hey The Vofa,

        The oil doesn't hydrate alone - when combined with collagen, the agents begin to repair the broken cells that are stripped from the nail bed and feed into the damaged cells. Hence the term 'hydrate' in this instance. Its not a regular oil like a moisturiser - yes it does moisturise too, but think of it like water nourishment to feed into nails/nail bed. Gel polish deprives the nail of sunlight and strips the basic nutrients because of the UV lamps and peeling off the shellac yourself, so the "oil" and collagen combined help reform the traumatised nail bed cells

        • "deprives the nail of sunlight and strips the basic nutrients because of the UV lamps "
          Seriously? Which is it?
          Removing artificial nails may do that, otherwise you are talking about different ways of applying acetone. Your "collagen and hydrating oils" may well ease soreness if the nail-bed cells are exposed and damaged, but I'd suggest if you have evidence that such cells are obtaining nutrition from such application, you get your Nobel prize for medicine application in toot sweet.
          You do realise that the "sunlight" you are so concerned with differs from indoor lights by virtue of its U.V content.
          You are not even wrong.

        • @terrys: Shellac also does that, not just artificial nails. No one claiming nobel peace price here, just time saving, cost saving, convenience and a safer process of removal for the nail.

        • +1

          @LaqueLift: No probs with that - Large problem with the "nourishing". Disclaimer - I am a biologist, and a person whose metabolism contains 187% more allergicernium than other researchers in advertising style bullshit, a field the cosmetic industries seem to wallow in.

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