How to clean your acrylic nail brushes and keep them from getting ruined – The Nail Tech Diaries (2024)

When your balance between monomer and polymer is off, you might be left with either a very dry bead or a very wet bead of acrylic that can ruin your brush. When the bead is too wet the acrylic tends to get trapped in between the bristles of your brush. You can tell your beads are too wet not only by looking at the application but some other signs like.

  • Your monomer will most likely start getting cloudy, and your brush will start feeling “puffy” and hard to work with. Almost like you’re not able to absorb enough monomer into the brush, but you’re absorbing too much at the same time?

When working with acrylic, you’ll be using a powder, called a polymer, and a liquid called a monomer. The monomer causes the powder to change into a liquid, paste-like state that you can then mold and create nail extensions. As soon as the polymer comes in contact with the monomer, the polymerization process will begin. Meaning that the acrylic will slowly start to dry.

The speed at which the acrylic dries depends on some factors like how wet your acrylic bead was that you started with and what the temperature of your salon is. Acrylic sets much faster in the heat than in cold weather.

In between picking up and placing acrylic beads, you will have to wipe your brush on a piece of paper towel. This helps prevent your monomer from becoming contaminated with acrylic and helps your brush stay clean. If you are, however working with very wet beads, the process of wiping your brush can actually matte the acrylic into the bristles even further. This is very annoying and can make doing nails very unpleasant and unnecessarily hard.

If your brush is left in that contaminated state for even a couple of minutes, the acrylic will harden on the bristles, leaving your brush all but useless. I threw out so many brushes when I started doing nails, looking back if I knew what I know now my brushes would firstly never ended in such a state, and if they did I would’ve been able to save them with some TLC.

This section is extremely simple. Other than the obvious fact that you should work on your liquid-to-powder ratio to prevent you from using overly wet beads of acrylic, there is something you can do after each service to preserve your brush. I tested this out one day to see if it would work, and low and behold my brushes look good as new after every use. I work in a pattern when doing nails. So I finish one hand, add glitter, encapsulate, etc, before moving to the next hand. This works great for me especially in colder times of the year when acrylic can take a bit longer to set. This means that when I’m done with my client’s left hand(I work from my left to right), the right hand will be dry and ready to file.

My trick is that after I’m done with my client’s left hand, I clean as much of the acrylic from my brush as possible, and then I prop it up upside down into my dappen dish with the leftover monomer. Note that this monomer is usually still quite clean. If your monomer is cloudy and contaminated with acrylic, I would suggest cleaning out the dish and adding a bid of clean monomer before doing this.

I leave my brush like that until I’m done filing the nails. This allows the monomer to soak into the bristles and liquify any leftover acrylic. Over the years I have gotten a lot better at the liquid-to-powder ratio so my beads aren’t as soggy or dry as they used to be. You can’t believe how much acrylic residue still gets stuck in my brush no matter how I clean it and how perfect I try to work.

After the brush is done soaking I gently wipe it on a paper towel, sticking it back in the monomer and cleaning it further if needed. I then roll the brush to make the bristles into a point again and store it. It’s important to not touch the bristles with your bare fingers, as overexposure to monomer can not only cause you to become allergic to the product over time, but the oils of your fingers will transfer to the brush which can harm your next application. As we know oil and acrylic or gel don’t work well together, and it can cause lifting of the product.

I would not recommend leaving your brush like this overnight or even for a couple of hours, as this will bend your bristles and make the brush very hard to work with. Remember to always try and work as clean as possible so your brush can serve you as long as it was intended to.

How to clean your acrylic nail brushes and keep them from getting ruined – The Nail Tech Diaries (2024)
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