Saturday, August 31, 2013

How to get water at room tempreture?

nail art with water
 on Water Marble | L'arte delle unghie
nail art with water image



Igloo


Im doing a water marble nail art and need to get a bowl of water at room tempreture. Could someone explain to me how to get tap water at room tempreture?
Im sorry i've just realised i put this in the wrong category!
Also if i should leave it sitting, for how long?



Answer
Yes, simply leaving it in the room will get it to the temperature of that room. How long it takes depends on several things. The volume of water, the temperature adjustment required, container shape (that the water is in) etc. I would say for water straight out of the tap, it would take a bowl full about 4 - 6 hours to equalise with the room.
If you have a thermometer, you could half fill from the tap and add warm water in small amounts. Checking the temperature as you do will speed things up a lot. If that would not affect your hobby, of course...

EDIT
I don't want to sound patronising here, but it might. If you do have a thermometer, remember to note the room temperature first before mixing the water to attain it. Leave the thermometer in the room for 5 minutes before taking a reading. Don't place it near or on heat or cold sources like radiators, direct sunlight, metal surfaces and so on. Best of all is to suspend it in the middle of the room.

What type of nail polish works the best for this?




Marlee


I want to do water marble nail art, but I don't know what polish works the best. I've looked all over the internet and I can't find anything that tells me what brand I should use. Help?!!!!?


Answer
Sally Hansen and China Glaze work best, although sally Hansen is cheaper. OPI works efficiently, but doesn't transfer to the nail as easy as sally Hansen and China glaze. Essie formula is too thick and doesn't swirl well in the water

Hope this helped and good luck :)




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