NancySyd
Well-Known Member
I'm glad the OP got their answer: if color is coming off, the topcoat isn't fully covering the color coat. As long as she is using the CND UV Lamp, that's a fact.
I am alarmed that there is a large amount of misinformation in this thread though, and feel compelled to address it.
Here is a fact: CND Shellac is positioned as a power polish for a SCIENTIFIC REASON. Not a marketing scheme. What's listed on the MSDS is irrelevant unless you personally know the exact process, chemical amounts, and testing protocols that go into creating CND Shellac. Yes, it has some of the same properties as other UV cured polishes. But there are HUGE differences in the actual composition of Shellac.
For example, if you paint Shellac onto a nail, and then skip curing, the solvents begin to evaporate. It won't fully cure on its own, but it will get set enough that you can not manipulate it with your brush without streaking it. Another fact: CND Shellac won't cure fully in a good deal of other manufacturers lamps, including the Gelish lamp. I've tried it with a nail pro, it was a fail.
CND Shellac is formulated to be applied to the nail, and removed without ANY filing or damage. Really! This is because most "gel polishes" are merely hard gel that's been diffused, with pigment added to it. CND Shellac is NOT a hard gel. It's a new formulation in its own class, and no other product behaves exactly like it.
Another huge difference is e CND UV Lamp itself- the UV Output of the lamp is higher and steadier than almost every other lamp in the market. This is also a fact. If Shellac is just another "gel lacquer," it would have a large amount of photo initiators to make the gel cure. Shellac does not have a high level of these, and is also 3-free and hypoallergenic.
MSDS Sheets alone do not give enough information to come to a fact-based scientific conclusion, and is designed to provide both workers and emergency personnel with the proper procedures for handling or working with a particular substance. And that is all.
And while we are a "little guy," our R&D team is supported by none other than Doug Schoon, so I think it's safe to say we can play ball with any of the big guys
This has definitely been a thought provoking thread! And I appreciate reading each and every response- we are so blessed to be in this industry NOW as opposed to 30 years ago
I think this muddies the water. The argument is not, and has never been, that Shellac is the same as other gel polishes. It is not. Each one is unique. But CND Shellac falls into a broad category called gel polishes (not hard gel) for a scientific reason - it is an acrylate that contains olimers and polymers that are set by exposure to a specific range of UV light. Gel polishes exist along a spectrum from more solvent-based to 100% pure gel, but they are all still gel polish/lacquer. It you go back to Doug Schoon's response to this months earlier, he concedes this point, comparing it to a cake. To continue Doug's analogy. Shellac is an Angel food cake, OPI is a Devil's Food, Gelish a yellow cake. They have different ingredients, but contain the essential ingredients that make it a cake and serve the same function. All of the attributes (save on, hypoallergenic) claimed for Shellac can be claimed by other gel polishes. It is a broad category and Shellac exists at one end of it and others and the other end. But to say it is not a gel polish flies in the face of the facts. It that changes with a new classification, then we can reassess, but for now, it is a gel lacquer.
All of that said, the fact that it is a gel polish is not a diminution of Shellac. The categorization is not made to demean Shellac. It is an excellent, innovative product made with the backing of an excellent R&D division and with spectacular customer support - at $62m, not a little guy but a major player! But it exists within a broader category and recognizing that is part of our training and education as professionals.
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