MAKE.N Nail Art Charms: dimensional charms, pearl ribbons, luxury parts and numbered nail parts
This Pretty Yeppuda collection groups Grace Collection pieces, handmade pearl ribbons, Luxury Swarovski-style pieces and numbered nail parts. The range should be read as MAKE.N design material for detailed Korean nail-art services, with product-by-product selection still required.
The collection works best as a charm cabinet for dimensional accents. Instead of treating the items as loose accessories, organise them by service role: what they hold, where they sit on the nail, how visible they are, and which gel or tool step is needed around them.
Charms are the raised accent cabinet of MAKE.N. They can create a centrepiece nail, a bow detail, a jewel-like point or a small 3D element that changes the whole set.
For salon menus, separate charms by size and service intensity: subtle single accent, ribbon or pearl detail, luxury crystal moment, and larger dimensional statement. This prevents oversized parts being chosen for the wrong nail length.
Create sample tips that show dimensional charms, pearl ribbons, luxury parts and numbered nail parts in real service situations. Add notes for base colour, placement point, adhesive or gel support if needed, finish choice, wear expectations discussed with the client, and the exact product page consulted.
Dimensional charms need careful placement, attachment and client suitability checks. Review product size, shape, quantity, attachment method and finishing guidance before use.
For professional salon buying, use this collection as a planning page, not as a substitute for product instructions. Open each product page for exact size, colour, material or ingredient information, curing or application guidance where relevant, warnings, price and availability before adding it to a service menu.
For charms, height and client lifestyle matter. Keep a subtle accent group, a ribbon or pearl group, a luxury crystal group and a larger statement group to avoid using the wrong part for the wrong service.
For service planning, keep a small note beside the collection: intended role, compatible support products, sample-tip reference and the exact product page checked. This helps the salon repeat the same design later instead of rebuilding the decision from memory.
When the category contains mixed items, separate them before buying. Gels, tools, stickers, chains, frames, charms and tips all have different handling needs, so the collection copy should guide browsing while the product page controls the final technical decision.
A good salon board shows the item in context: on a nail length similar to the client, with the base colour, finish and placement decision recorded. That makes the collection practical for consultation and staff training.