Goes with everything
White dress, black evening gown, jeans and t-shirt – French always works. No colour decision you might regret, no combination that clashes.

White tip, pink base, perfect line. The look that's worked for decades and always will. French Complete brings this classic to hands and feet at once – with gel polish for weeks of wear. Full care for both areas, then the precision work: every smile line drawn by hand, every transition seamless. The result looks like natural nails, only better. Subtle enough for any situation, elegant enough for the most important day. French Complete being the wedding package isn't a coincidence.

In a world full of trends, French stays constant. There are reasons this look never disappears.
White dress, black evening gown, jeans and t-shirt – French always works. No colour decision you might regret, no combination that clashes.
Accepted at the office, admired at galas. French is the only nail style at home in both worlds. Subtle, but not boring.
Ninety percent of my bridal appointments are French. It matches the dress, never distracts in photos, looks elegant without drawing attention. The ring is the star, not the nail.
French with regular polish? Every scratch shows after three days. French with gel polish? Three to four weeks flawless. The precision work lasts.
I'm Nataliia. French is technically more demanding than any other nail style. Solid color is straightforward. Drawing the perfect smile line? That takes practice, patience and a steady hand. With French Complete, I draw every line individually. No stencils, no stickers, no shortcuts. That's why it takes longer than other packages – and that's why it ends up looking like it should. The symmetry between nails, the even curve, the clean transition – these are the details that separate 'homemade' from 'professional'. Most people book French for special occasions. Weddings, engagements, important celebrations. But some simply wear it all the time – because it's never wrong and they can't be bothered constantly thinking about colours.
— NataliiaTraditional French: white tip, delicate pink base. Modern French: thinner lines, more natural base. Baby Boomer: soft gradient instead of hard line. We'll find your style.
Broad white tip for dramatic effect, paper-thin line for subtle look. Depending on nail shape and preference, I adjust the proportions.
French doesn't only work on long nails. Short nails get the smile line too – it looks different, but just as beautiful.

The longest combo appointment – because French needs more time than single-colour gel polish. Every line needs to be drawn.
If there's still gel polish from last time, it comes off first professionally. Clean base for the new work.
15 minutes
Warm water, nourishing solution. Feet soften while you settle in and relax.
8 minutes
With French, shape is decisive. The smile line follows the nail shape – so shape must be perfect first.
10 minutes
Clean cuticles are especially important with French. The light base makes every flaw visible.
8 minutes
Groomed feet as the frame for elegant nails. Calluses professionally removed.
10 minutes
Short break. Feet are prepped, the actual French comes at the end.
3 minutes
Hands soaked for cuticle work.
5 minutes
French is precision work. A few preparations help.
How should your nails look? Oval is classic, slightly square is modern, almond is elegant. Bring example pictures if you're unsure.
French looks good at any length, but different. Short looks more natural, long more dramatic. We'll discuss what suits you.
Oil on nails interferes with adhesion. Best to skip hand cream in the morning.
One hundred ten to one hundred thirty minutes for the appointment itself. That's long, but precision needs its time. Relax and enjoy.
French with gel polish is robust. But a few things help maintain the perfection.
Perfect harmony, mixed shapes, and timing.
Just message me on WhatsApp – I'm happy to answer your questions.
French Complete slots fill up fast, especially before wedding season and holidays.
Book at least a week ahead for important events. Last-minute availability is rare.
Show up in flip-flops or bring open shoes. Cramming fresh toes into boots isn't great.
Bring reference photos if you have them. Pinterest boards, Instagram saves, whatever. Visual references make everything faster.
And bring something to drink. Two hours is a long time.
Für das Komplett-Paket reserviere ich einen größeren Zeitblock – darum sind die Termine begrenzt. Gerade im Sommer lohnt es sich, etwas im Voraus zu buchen.
Profi-Tipp: Bring am besten offene Schuhe (Flip-Flops o.ä.) für den Heimweg mit. Auch wenn das Material trocken wirkt, sind geschlossene Schuhe direkt nach der Pediküre immer ein Risiko für das frische French.
Probably yes if: Wedding coming up. Summer vacation. Graduation. Any event where hands and feet might be visible at the same time.
Probably no if: Dead of winter, no special plans, feet permanently in hiding. In that case, hands-only French makes more sense.
No wrong answer. Just different situations.
Here's what nobody tells you: hands and feet have different lifespans.
Hands need a refresh every two and a half to three weeks. The smile line migrates, yellowing threatens, the proportions drift.
Feet? Five to six weeks, easy. Protected environment, slower growth, less exposure to everything that damages polish.
So even if you do both the same day, your hands will be ready for round two while your feet still look fresh.
Solutions: Refresh hands solo every three weeks, feet every other time. Or before any major event, reset both regardless of how they look.
Ja, der Termin ist länger. Dafür sparst du dir eine zweite Anfahrt und einen extra Termin im Kalender.
Du kommst einmal, kannst dich zurücklehnen – und gehst rundum abgestimmt wieder raus. Gerade vor dem Urlaub oder einer Feier ist dieses „Alles erledigt“-Gefühl enorm entspannend.
Yes, Complete costs more than hands alone. But think about it differently.
Two separate appointments: twice the travel, twice the scheduling hassle, twice the mental load of 'I still need to book feet'. And at the end, maybe they don't quite match anyway.
One Complete appointment: show up once, leave once, matching guaranteed.
For weddings and big events, nobody's counting pennies. For regular maintenance, you decide what's worth it.
Gleicher Tag, gleiches Material, gleiche Handschrift – das ist die Idee.
Ich arbeite für Hände und Füße mit denselben Produkten und derselben Abstimmung. So vermeiden wir, dass sich der Ton durch unterschiedliche Chargen verändert oder die Linienführung leicht variiert. Am Ende sieht es nicht nur „ähnlich“ aus, sondern wirklich zusammengehörig.
Plane bitte etwas Zeit ein: ungefähr 2 bis 2,5 Stunden. French ist Präzisionsarbeit.
French Complete means I open one bottle of white, one bottle of pink, and both go on your hands and feet. Same products. Same light. Same mood. Same me.
Three weeks later, when you look at your hands and then glance at your feet, you see the same French. Not similar – identical.
That's the whole point.
June through September: Peak French Complete season. Sandals, open toes, beach days. Hands and feet both on display. Makes total sense to match them.
November through March: Your feet live in boots. Who sees them? You. Maybe your partner. Many clients do French on hands, nude or clear on feet. Half the cost, half the time, and nobody knows the difference.
The exceptions: Got a spa weekend coming? Beach vacation in January? Holiday party with those strappy heels? Then Complete makes sense even in winter.
Je nach Saison lohnt sich das Paket unterschiedlich stark:
Hände brauchen meist früher ein Refresh als Füße. Während Fingernägel oft nach rund 2,5 bis 3 Wochen wieder dran sind, halten Fußnägel häufig deutlich länger (4–6 Wochen).
So macht’s Sinn: Ich mache die Füße einfach bei jedem zweiten Hand-Termin neu. Das reicht in der Regel völlig. Vor wichtigen Events (zum Beispiel Urlaub) ziehen wir beides auf Wunsch wieder zeitgleich zusammen.
French is unforgiving. The tiniest difference between two nails is visible. That's what makes it elegant – and that's what makes it tricky.
Do your hands on Monday, feet on Friday? Different white. Maybe just slightly, but different. The smile line won't be exactly the same thickness. The pink base might lean warmer on one, cooler on the other.
Nobody notices when they're separate. But the moment you're in sandals and your hands are next to your feet? Your eye catches it. Something's off.
French lebt von Präzision. Bei Farbe fällt eine Nuance Unterschied kaum auf – bei French schon.
Wenn Hände und Füße an unterschiedlichen Tagen oder in verschiedenen Studios gemacht werden, können kleine Abweichungen entstehen: ein Weißton ist kühler, die „Smile Line“ etwas runder oder gerader. Für sich genommen wirkt alles schön – aber nebeneinander (gerade in Sandalen) kann es schnell unruhig aussehen. Das Paket sorgt dafür, dass alles wie aus einem Guss wirkt.
Viele buchen diesen Termin für den großen Tag – egal ob als Braut, Trauzeugin oder Gast. Auf Fotos sieht man beides: den Ring an der Hand und offene Schuhe beim Tanzen.
Most of my French Complete bookings are wedding-related. Brides, bridesmaids, mothers, guests.
Makes sense. Weddings are documented to death. The ring shot. The bouquet hold. The barefoot dancing at midnight. Those photos live forever. You don't want your hands saying 'elegant bride' while your feet say 'afterthought'.
My recommendation: Book two to three days before. Earlier means visible growth by the big day. Same day means no backup plan if something goes sideways.
French Complete is my longest appointment. Budget two to two and a half hours.
First fifteen minutes: decisions. Classic sharp line? Baby boomer fade? Skinny modern? What white works with your skin? I figure this out once and apply it to everything.
Next hour: hands. Each nail individually. Left hand matches right hand. Precision work.
Next hour: feet. Pedicure prep if you want it, then the same French technique. Same products, same approach.
Last five minutes: hands and feet side by side. Final approval.
Du entscheidest, was du brauchst. Ich berate dich gerne – ohne Druck.