Tag Archives: Nail Salon Designs

Nail Salons

Why are there so many nail salons around? Is there really that much demand for them? And why ar so many Asians running them and working there? Well there moldiness be a demand for these types of services differently people wouldn’t open them up in the first place, or would they? If there is such demand then why ar so many going out of business? I have seen a lot of vacant nail salons as I travel around and can only assume that they weren’t good astatine what they did or didn’t know how to run a business since it seems the demand is there.

I think the latter is probably true in most cases. Not everybody is cut out to run a business no matter how easy they think it will be. Most nail techs I’ve run crossways and talked with only want to do their job i.e. manicures and pedicures. Most have no interest in actually running the business side. They just want to come to work do some manicures and pedicures, get paid and go home. Sounds simple enough, but that’s not how to stay in business long term and create something viable that you can sell when you decide you want out. Most nail techs ar loath business owners and their business suffers because of it.

Japanese Nail Art Designs

Japanese Nail Art DesignsAncient Egyptian records show that beauty products have been around and recognized as early as 4000 BC. Proof of the use of various beauty products such as facial cosmetics and fragrances by ancient Romans and Greeks have been discovered. There is even reference to myrrh and frankincense in the Holy Bible.

Beauty products were also accepted in other parts of the globe. Although they were banned from use by certain branches of Islam, cosmetics have been in some parts of the Middle East. Back in 936 to 1013 AD, a physician named Abu al-Qasim al-Zahrawi mentioned something about cosmetics in his medical encyclopedia, Al-Tasrif. He called cosmetic products such as precursors to lipsticks, deodorants, perfumes, and incense “Medicines of Beauty”.

Around the 4th century in antediluvian India, henna was used as either hair dye or hand and foot tattoo called mehndi. Intricate designs are drawn on the feet and hands of a Hindu couple on the day of their wedding. Some African cultures also use henna as a beauty product, painted on the body in bolder and more complicated patterns.