Pretty Yeppuda Tools: workstation bench for nail services
Pretty Yeppuda Tools is the practical workstation bench of the Pretty Yeppuda own supply range. Shopify readback shows precision sticks, lint-free wipes, soft dust brush, double gel art brush, wax stone picker, PinCure lamps, full-cover tips, pusher, hands/feet UV LED lamps, multi-purpose tool and tip clipper, depending on stock.
This page should not be written like a gel colour page. Tools support a service step: cleaning edges, wiping, dusting, art placement, pin-curing, tip sizing, cuticle/nail prep, lamp work or trimming. The buying question is “which step needs support?” rather than “which shade do I like?”
For salon setup, organise these items by bench position. Keep wipes and precision sticks near cleanup, brushes and wax picker near art placement, tips and tip clipper near sizing, and lamps near curing or pin-curing tasks.
A staff note should record the tool name, intended service step, cleaning or replacement routine, compatibility limitation and any electrical-use instruction from the product page. This is especially important for lamps and reusable tools.
Avoid broad cure, safety or performance promises at collection level. A lamp or tool may support professional workflow, but exact use, maintenance and compatibility must come from the product page and salon procedure.
Use the collection as a browsing map, then open each product page for exact size, material or ingredients, application/use instructions, compatibility, warnings, price and availability.
For the tools collection, create a physical bench layout: cleanup tools to the left, placement tools in the centre, tips and clipping tools near sizing, lamps in the curing area and wipes where every technician can reach them.
Tool pages need practical language. A wax picker, pusher, lamp, tip clipper and wipe are all support items, but they have different cleaning, use and replacement questions. That is why the collection should guide by task, not by trend.
For Pretty Yeppuda own-supply collections, the strongest structure is a workstation map. Ask whether the service needs decoration, placement support, cleanup, tip work, lamp support, cuticle-care retail or a narrow gel-brand shelf, then choose the product category that matches that task.
Sample boards are especially important for these collections because many products are small visual items. Keep real examples for chrome, foil, pearl, inlay, rhinestone, flakie, flower and 3D pieces, and keep separate workstation cards for tools and oils.
Avoid carrying over old broad claims from legacy collection descriptions. The collection can say what is stocked and how to plan around it, but durability, cure, safety, skin benefit or compliance language belongs only where there is product-specific evidence.