Diamond-bit dry prep
The service is performed without soaking. Charlotte uses careful e-file work and diamond bits to refine the nail plate, eponychium area, and surrounding skin before gel is applied.
Russian Manicures
Charlotte’s Russian manicure work is built on advanced dry prep, e-file education, and diamond-bit technique. The goal is a clean application, soft grow-out, and a protective finish that supports the natural nail.

The service is performed without soaking. Charlotte uses careful e-file work and diamond bits to refine the nail plate, eponychium area, and surrounding skin before gel is applied.
Precise prep allows product to be placed close to the cuticle area for a freshly finished look and a smoother grow-out. Charlotte prefers four-week maintenance to keep the natural nail protected.
The appointment gives Charlotte time to assess nail health, existing product, shape, apex, length, and lifestyle before choosing the right overlay, rebalance, restructure, or reshape.
Why it feels elevated
The technique is only as good as the artist performing it. Nail Qwn treats Russian manicures as an advanced service: clean tools, thoughtful e-file work, conservative cuticle-area refinement, and enough appointment time to avoid rushed prep. Charlotte is also trained to screen for health considerations, including diabetes, psoriasis, cancer treatment history, allergies, and other conditions that may affect how a service should be performed.
It is a dry manicure technique that uses advanced e-file work and diamond bits to refine the nail plate, eponychium area, and surrounding skin before product is applied.
The finish looks exceptionally clean, product can be placed close to the cuticle area, and the grow-out is softer when the service is performed carefully.
Not always. Charlotte screens for nail health, skin sensitivity, diabetes, psoriasis, cancer treatment history, and other considerations before choosing the safest approach.
Charlotte prefers four-week maintenance for the health of the natural nail. Some sets may last longer, but waiting up to eight weeks is not the goal.
No. Charlotte books the time she needs so every set can be balanced, reshaped, and finished cleanly.