Liz McKeon has been in the beauty, wellness, treatment business in Ireland for well over a decade. She writes a popular monthly column in the IRISH BEAUTY magazine, and has been repeteadly on RTE OFF THE RAILS as a beauty consultant. She also appeared in the SALON IRELAND magazine and other important publications.
The file. File from the outside edge to the middle on the fingers, never from side to side, as it fan leave the nail edge open and prone to dehydration. For toes, file straight across in one direction to prevent ingrown nails.
The nourisher, cutlicle cream to maintain soft cuticles.
The treatment, to slough off dead skin cells and allow moisturiser to sink in more easily.
The buffer, to give a super-glass-like shine!
The crea, keep next to the bed, so you can apply it at night to keep your hands and feet soft!
Your daily nail fix: condition cutlcles, massage a cuticle oil into your nails. It feeds the nail base so a healthier, thicker nail will come through. Apply before going to bed, so it has hours to work its magic before being washed away.
Your weekly nail fix: revive a manicure or pedicure polish with a layer of top coat or colour.
Nourish nails - a DIY hand and foot treatment, including exfoliation, followed by a moisturising mask or cream will keep skin pristine and also condition and hydrate the nails.
Appear polished - even without varnish. For a glass-like shine, buff nails across from side to side with a soft-grit, natural nail buffer and it should last the life of the nail. If the shine dulls, buff the entire nail with the softest side of the buffer.
You don’t have to break the bank on a flashy gym membership to get in shape.
Walk more and take the stairs to work your glutes, missing out steps makes it harder. Make sure to eat plenty of proteins, along with good carbs, such as brown rice, fruit and vegetables. Otherwise you’ll have low energy and your body will store fat.
Mixing up cardio exercise with weights is a sure-fire way to sculpt limbs and increase lean body mass. Aim for 4 sessions per week. Start with a longer session of low-intensity cardio such as walking or cycling and high numbers of repetitions with weights. Then, build up to full-on, high-intensity cardio work such as running, followed by fewer repetitions with heavier weights. So, effectively your workout gets harder, but takes less time to do.