Nude Nail Designs: 35 Looks from Square to Almond
By Elia, SHANGMENG Nail Trend Curator.
Key Takeaways: - Nude nail designs span five finish families — sheer and glazed, French variations, nude ombré, chrome and metallic, and art-accented — each available across every nail shape. - 35 designs organised by finish so you can match your look to your lifestyle, not just a trend post. - The right nude shade is about undertone matching, not just depth — warm skin tones need warm nudes; cool skin tones need cool ones. - Nail shape changes how nude reads: square makes it graphic, almond makes it romantic, round keeps it soft, coffin makes it editorial. - SHANGMENG soft gel press-ons deliver every finish in this guide — 32 nails across 16 sizes, no UV lamp, under 10 minutes.

Nude nail designs are nails finished in skin-tone or near-skin-tone shades — including sheer pinks, warm beiges, cool taupes, peach nudes, and milky neutrals — across any nail shape. Press-on nude nail sets in soft gel cost $10–$15 per set, include 32 nails across 16 sizes, and apply in under 10 minutes without UV lamps or salon appointments.
The appeal of nude nails is not minimalism for its own sake. It is precision: a nude that is tuned exactly to your skin tone, on a shape that flatters your hand, creates a hand that looks groomed, expensive, and intentional without demanding constant attention. That is why nude remains the single most searched nail colour category year after year — not because people lack imagination, but because a perfect nude is genuinely harder to execute than a bright colour and the result is worth getting right.
This guide organises 35 nude designs by finish family. Find the category that suits your occasion and skin tone, then choose your shape.
Why Nude Never Goes Out of Style

Nude nail designs have led every major trend forecaster's list — Vogue, Allure, Byrdie, and Elle — for the better part of a decade. That longevity is not fashion amnesia. There are structural reasons why nude nails resist cyclical trends in a way that chromatic colours cannot.
Nude is not one colour; it is a spectrum of 50. From sheer blush to deep caramel to cool taupe to warm greige — the nude palette encompasses more visual range than most people realise. Finding the right nude for your skin is a calibration exercise, not a default setting. When you find it, the effect is genuinely distinctive: a nude that matches your undertone on a shape that suits your hand makes your hands look like the best version of themselves.
Nude is context-agnostic. According to Byrdie's nail trend editors, one of the consistent findings in salon consultation data is that clients who request "something appropriate for work and going out" almost always land on a nude. No other colour category clears both contexts without compromise. Nudes at job interviews read as groomed and precise. The same nudes at dinner read as quietly elegant.
Nude is the quiet luxury signal. Vogue's coverage of the quiet luxury trend across fashion seasons has consistently identified the understated manicure — nude, precise, well-fitted — as the nail equivalent of a good pair of well-made trousers. It signals taste through restraint rather than through decoration.
Nude scales across every finish and shape. A sheer nude works on round short nails. The same shade in an opaque finish on a square shape is an entirely different statement. A nude ombré on almond nails is romantic; a nude chrome on coffin is editorial. The colour family contains multitudes because finish and shape are full design variables.
For the full buying guide across shade ranges, best nude press-on nails: 8 shades for every skin tone breaks down the specific shade families — from vanilla cream to rose brown — with skin tone matching for each.
35 Nude Nail Designs by Finish
Sheer & Glazed (Designs 1–7)

Sheer and glazed nudes are the most universally flattering category because their translucency automatically adjusts to the wearer's nail bed colour. Less pigment means more of your natural nail shows through, which makes the finish semi-personalised by default.
1. Sheer Glazed Blush — A near-translucent pink-nude with a high-gloss topcoat that renders the nail glass-like. Elle named the glazed finish among its top recurring trends of 2026: luminous, barely-there, and expensive-looking from every angle. Works on every shape; particularly flattering on almond and oval.
2. Milky White-Nude — A soft white-nude sitting between fully sheer and fully opaque. Not jelly translucent — there is pigment here — but coverage is thin enough that the natural nail shows faintly through. The effect reads as clean, modern, and polished without any of the harshness of a solid white. Works on round, square, and almond shapes.
3. Sheer Peach Nude — A warm blush-peach with golden undertones. Sheer peach is the nude for warm-toned skin at every depth: it harmonises with golden, olive, and brown undertones in a way that pink-based nudes frequently miss. On almond nails, sheer peach reads particularly romantic. The nude peach finish is one of the most searched sub-categories in the nude cluster — precisely because warm-toned wearers often find "nude" defaults to a pink that reads off on their skin.
4. Jelly Nude — A translucent, gel-like finish that gives the nail a liquid, three-dimensional quality — like lacquered glass over your natural nail. The jelly finish sits between sheer and solid; the nail bed colour contributes actively to the final look. For the full breakdown of what makes jelly nudes different from standard sheers, our jelly nude nails guide covers finish mechanics, the best shapes for the trend, and application tips.
5. Glazed Donut Nude — A medium-coverage blush-nude with an ultra-high-gloss topcoat applied in layers to build luminosity. The high shine creates a dimensional, almost wet-look surface that catches light from multiple angles. Unlike standard sheer nudes, the glazed donut finish has enough topcoat depth to read at a distance — which makes it effective on camera and in photographs.
6. Aurora Shimmer Nude — A sheer nude base infused with a fine multi-tonal shimmer that shifts between champagne, pearl, and soft rose depending on the light. The shimmer is subtle enough to disappear in shadow and appear in direct light, creating a finish that reads as a special-occasion upgrade from a standard sheer. Particularly effective on almond and coffin shapes.
7. Barely-There Nude — The most minimal expression in this category: a sheer wash of the lightest possible blush-pink, applied in one coat. The effect reads as "clean nail" rather than "painted nail" — which is precisely the intention. This is the nude for people who find all manicures too visible but still want something more groomed than bare.
French Nude (Designs 8–14)

The French manicure on a nude base — rather than the traditional pink or white — is the upgrade that modernises one of the most enduring nail looks in existence. The nude base quiets the contrast between base and tip, making the French read as architectural rather than traditional.
8. Classic Nude French — A warm nude base with a clean white tip. On square nails, the straight smile line runs flat across the top for a graphic, modern result. On almond nails, the curved smile line follows the natural tip contour for a more romantic expression. Byrdie's nail trend editors identify the nude-base French as the dominant variant replacing the traditional pink-base French in the clean-girl aesthetic.
9. Champagne-Tip French — Same structure as a classic French, but the tip is warm champagne rather than cool bright white. The champagne tip reads more luxurious and warm — less dental precision, more evening elegance. On nude bases with warm undertones, the champagne tip creates a seamless gradation that makes the French line less visible and the overall effect more refined.
10. Reverse French (Half-Moon) — Instead of a white tip, a darker nude or soft chocolate sits at the cuticle edge, emphasising the half-moon at the nail base. The square shape makes this geometry unusually clean: two contrasting geometric events — the flat tip above and the curved half-moon below. The almond shape gives the half-moon a more delicate, finger-lengthening version of the same effect.
11. Double-Line French — A clean nude base with two thin parallel lines at the tip — one white, one in warm gold or sheer pink — rather than a single smile line. The doubling reads as detail-oriented and considered without requiring freehand skill. Effective at any length and particularly camera-ready.
12. Micro French — A French tip so narrow it barely registers as a tip — 1mm of white at the very edge. The effect is that your natural nail looks groomed to architectural precision rather than painted. Combine with a sheer nude base for the most minimal possible French expression, on square or almond shapes.
13. Diagonal French — A French tip applied at an angle across the nail — the smile line runs from one bottom corner diagonally to the opposite top edge — rather than horizontally. The diagonal creates visual movement on a nude nail without requiring any colour beyond the French line itself. Most effective on medium-to-long almond or coffin shapes.
14. Split French — A nude base where the tip is divided into two sections — one half white, one half in a warm nude-adjacent tone like champagne or soft gold — with a fine vertical line between them. The split creates geometric interest at the tip without adding colour. A slightly more editorial version of the classic French, especially effective on square and coffin shapes where the flat tip makes the division precise.
Nude Ombré (Designs 15–21)
Nude ombré is one of the most technically impressive nail finishes that still reads as restrained. The gradient between two neutral shades — or between a neutral and white — creates depth and dimension without departing from the nude colour family. Search volume data confirms "nude to white ombre nails" (140 monthly searches) and "nude nails ombre" (390 searches) as two of the highest-demand sub-categories in this cluster.
15. Nude-to-White Baby Boomer — A gradient from warm nude at the cuticle to clean white at the tip, blended seamlessly. The baby boomer (also called "pink and white ombré" at salons) is the gradient version of the French manicure — same colour palette, zero visible line. Elle named it among the most requested salon finishes of 2025 and demand continues to grow. Our full ombré nails guide covers the technical execution, best colour pairings, and how press-on ombré achieves the same result.
16. Reverse Nude Ombré — White or milky nude at the cuticle, fading toward a deeper warm nude or soft taupe at the tip. The inverted direction gives this gradient a moody, editorial quality. On square nails, the deeper colour at the flat tip emphasises the shape's geometric terminus. On almond nails, the deepening toward the tip creates a shadow effect that elongates visually.
17. Nude-to-Blush Gradient — A gradient from a warm skin-tone nude at the base to a soft pink blush at the tip. The two colours stay within the same pale, restrained family — the gradient is a warmth transition rather than a colour change. Best on almond and oval shapes where the curved tip softens the blush landing.
18. Peach-to-Cream Gradient — A warm sheer peach at the cuticle fading to an almost-white cream at the tip. This is the nude ombré for warm-toned wearers who find pink-based gradients slightly too cool: the peachy base warms the gradient and keeps the finish harmonious with golden or olive undertones. The specific demand for nude peach nails (170 monthly searches) confirms this as a meaningful sub-category with underserved supply.
19. Dual-Tone Nude Blend — Two different nudes blended at the centre — a cool rosé nude and a warm beige-nude — with the blend zone covering the entire nail. The result is dimensional and slightly iridescent-looking in changing light, despite involving no shimmer. An advanced ombré technique that rewards close inspection and looks painterly from a distance.
20. Sheer Fade — A sheer nude base with coverage that thins toward the tips — the inverse of a French — creating the appearance of near-transparency at the nail edge. On almond nails this produces an almost glass-effect at the tip. A subtle, distinctive design that resists categorisation as either a French or a standard ombré.
21. Taupe-to-White Winter Ombré — A cooler, more restrained gradient: a deep cool taupe at the cuticle fading toward a clean milky white at the tip. Where the baby boomer reads warm and bridal, the taupe-to-white reads more structured and directional — a nude ombré for cooler months and cooler skin undertones.
Chrome & Metallic Nude (Designs 22–28)
Chrome and metallic finishes applied over a nude base are the editorial pivot in this guide — the designs that carry nude into special-occasion and editorial territory without abandoning the restraint of the colour family. Vogue's 2026 nail trend coverage highlighted powder chrome over nude bases as the technique elevating minimalist manicures from bare to considered.
22. Rose Gold Chrome Nude — A warm nude base with chrome powder applied to create a rose-gold mirror finish. The effect is a metallic that reads as nude from a distance and as chrome at close range. The dual reading makes rose gold chrome nude the most versatile entry in this category: office-appropriate in ambient light, photographically striking in direct light. Our nude cat eye nails guide covers the related magnetic effect for wearers who want directional shimmer rather than all-over chrome.
Still worried they will look fake? Choose the shape and finish that matches your natural nail width; the right set reads polished, not pasted on.
23. Champagne Chrome — A cool-warm hybrid: a neutral nude base with a champagne-toned chrome that sits between gold and silver. The champagne chrome is the most universally flattering metallic because it avoids committing to either warm or cool. On almond nails, it creates a finish that moves from satin to mirror with hand movement. On coffin nails, the flat tip reflects champagne light at a clean horizontal angle.
24. Gold Foil Edge — A nude base with a thin strip of gold foil applied at the tip — either flat-tip square or curved almond — creating a metallic rim rather than a full chrome finish. The foil edge reads as jewellery-adjacent: architectural and precise without requiring full metallic coverage. 0.5mm of gold at the tip changes the entire character of a nude nail.
25. Pearl Shimmer Nude — A nude base infused with a pearlescent shimmer that reflects soft white and champagne tones rather than mirror-chrome. The pearl effect is softer than powder chrome and more appropriate for formal daytime settings. According to Allure, pearl finishes have maintained consistent presence in bridal and event nail coverage precisely because they read as luxurious without the severity of full mirror chrome.
26. Chrome Cat Eye Nude — A nude base with a magnetic chrome cat eye effect: a concentrated line of metallic reflection that moves across the nail with hand position. The cat eye line is most visible when the hand is flat and disappears when the nail edge is angled toward the viewer. The effect is subtle enough to read as a texture accent on a nude nail rather than as a separate colour. Most effective on almond and oval shapes where the curved surface catches the magnetic line cleanly.
27. Silver Chrome Fade — A nude base with silver chrome applied only to the tip half of the nail, creating a chrome ombré: nude at the base, metallic at the tip. The fade is the chrome equivalent of a French tip — same spatial logic, different finish language. On coffin nails, the horizontal silver edge at the tip is a graphic design statement. On almond nails, the chrome tip creates a pointed flash of metallic.
28. Bronzed Nude Metallic — A deep warm nude base with a bronze metallic shimmer — warmer than gold, deeper than champagne. The bronze tone reads as a nude-adjacent metallic on warm medium-to-deep skin tones: deeply flattering rather than merely decorative. On short square or round nails, the bronze shimmer is enough surface interest without requiring any additional design element.
Nude with Art Accents (Designs 29–35)
Art-accented nude nails follow one rule: one element, executed precisely. More than one accent on a nude base tips from editorial to cluttered. The nude field is the canvas; the accent is the entire composition.
29. Single Rhinestone — A nude nail with one small rhinestone placed at a corner or the centre — not a cluster, one stone. The placement is deliberate: a single accent on a nude field reads as intentional, not decorative. Applied on ring fingers only, it creates asymmetric detail across the hand. Applied across all ten fingers, it creates a consistent architectural point.
30. Negative Space Line Art — A nude base with a single thin geometric line in white or champagne drawn across the centre. The line does not represent anything — it is pure interruption of the nude field. One clean line on a nude nail is enough surface decoration to read in photographs without competing with the shape.
31. Tortoiseshell Detail — A nude base with tortoiseshell brushwork covering approximately one-third of the nail — tip section or base. Tortoiseshell (warm amber, translucent caramel, warm brown patches) reads as a neutral print over a nude base. According to Allure's 2026 trend coverage, tortoiseshell has become a permanent fixture in the quiet luxury nail rotation because it is technically a print but reads as a neutral.
32. Gold Leaf Accent — A nude base with small irregular flakes of 24-carat-appearance gold leaf pressed onto one section of the nail. Gold leaf reads more organic and less manufactured than foil because the flakes are irregular — each nail is technically unique. On almond nails over a warm nude base, gold leaf flakes read as jewellery rather than decoration.
33. Marble Swirl — A nude base with thin swirling lines in white and champagne — the marble effect. On a nude base rather than a white one, the marble lines have less contrast and read as more subtle: a texture rather than a pattern. Most effective on coffin and almond shapes where the larger nail surface gives the swirl room to develop.
34. Botanical Line Art — A nude base with a single fine-line botanical illustration — a small leaf, a delicate stem, minimal floral — in white or nude-adjacent gold. The illustration covers no more than one-third of the nail. Fine-line nail art on a nude field reads as artistic restraint: skill demonstrated through precision and economy rather than coverage.
35. Minimalist Colour Block — A nude base with a single geometric block of a second colour — a triangle of soft white, a square of champagne — occupying one corner of the nail. The block is not blended; it is sharp-edged geometry on the nude field. The contrast between the soft nude and the crisp geometric edge is the entire composition. On square nails, the right angle of the colour block echoes the right angle of the nail tip.
Choosing Nude by Skin Tone
Choosing the wrong nude for your skin tone is more visible than choosing the wrong colour in almost any other category. A blue nail on a warm skin tone reads as a colour choice. A wrong-undertone nude on a warm skin tone reads as an error — the nail looks grey, sickly, or simply absent. The following guidelines apply across all 35 designs in this guide.
Fair Skin
Warm undertone (golden, peachy): Warm champagne pinks, peach nudes, and soft caramel beiges. A cool-toned taupe on warm fair skin pulls grey instantly. The sheer peach nude (Design 3), champagne-tip French (Design 9), and rose gold chrome (Design 22) are the most flattering entries here. Avoid mauve and cool-pink nudes.
Cool undertone (pink, bluish): Dusty rose, mauve-nude, and cool blue-adjacent pinks. A warm beige nude on cool fair skin can read dirty rather than skin-matching. The milky white-nude (Design 2), micro French (Design 12), and pearl shimmer nude (Design 25) are ideal — they work with the natural cool-pink tones already present in fair cool skin.
Medium Skin
Warm undertone (olive, golden brown): Rich warm beiges, honey tones, and terracotta-adjacent nudes. The dual-tone nude blend (Design 19) and bronzed nude metallic (Design 28) read beautifully against olive-warm medium skin. Avoid cool taupes — they pull grey against warm-medium undertones.
Cool undertone (pink-brown, neutral): Cool mauve, dusty pink, and neutral taupes with no yellow content. The champagne chrome (Design 23) is the signature cool-medium choice — the metallic catches the pink undertones in the skin and amplifies them. The nude-to-blush gradient (Design 17) also works especially well here.
Deep Skin
Warm undertone (red-brown, orange-brown): Deep caramels, warm chocolates, and cognac nudes. Sheer nudes often disappear against deep warm skin — pigment is needed. The deep neutral taupe Design (in the Sheer family) and the nude-to-white baby boomer (Design 15) both work because the white tip or deeper colour creates contrast that sheers cannot provide.
Cool undertone (blue-brown, red-brown): Deep berry-adjacent taupes and cool chocolates. The gold foil edge (Design 24) and gold leaf accent (Design 32) create warmth against cool deep undertones through metallic contrast — gold reads as luxurious rather than chromatic on deep cool skin. The reverse nude ombré (Design 16) in a deep berry-to-taupe combination reads as a nude gradient rather than a colour one.
For a detailed breakdown of shade families across the warm-cool-depth spectrum, our best nail colors for short nails guide covers selection principles that apply equally to longer nails and all five shapes below.
Best Shapes for Nude Nail Designs
Nude changes dramatically depending on nail shape. The same sheer blush-nude reads soft and romantic on almond, graphic and structured on square, modern and workwear-ready on round, editorial on coffin, and classic on oval. Shape is a full design variable — not an afterthought.
Square — The most graphic shape for nude. Straight sides terminate at a flat 90-degree tip, which frames the nude colour inside a precise rectangle. Sheer nudes that might disappear on rounder shapes stay visible on square because the tip edge defines the boundary. French nude (Designs 8–14) and chrome accents (22–24) are particularly effective here. For 20 designs specific to this shape, our square nude nails guide covers the full square-nude range.
Almond — The most romantic shape for nude. The tapered sides converge at a softly pointed tip, which gives nude nails a finger-lengthening, delicate quality. Sheer and glazed finishes (Designs 1–7) and ombré gradients (15–21) are most at home on almond — the curved surface softens every gradient and gives sheer nudes a particularly luminous reading. The shape is forgiving for press-ons because the taper means sizing fits a wider range of nail beds.
Round — The most wearable and universally appropriate shape for nude. The curved tip is the safest choice for professional settings and everyday wear. Sheer nudes, French nudes, and minimalist accents (29–30) all work at short-to-medium round lengths. Round nude nails are the nail equivalent of a good white shirt: always appropriate, always groomed.
Coffin (Ballerina) — The most editorial shape for nude. The extended length with tapered sides and a flat tip creates a high-fashion canvas for chrome and metallic finishes (Designs 22–28) and art accents (29–35). Coffin nude nails are the shape for wearers who want maximum visual impact while remaining within the nude colour family. Most effective at medium-to-long lengths.
Oval — The classic shape for nude. Slightly tapered sides with a rounded tip — more elongating than round, less dramatic than almond. Oval nude nails are the traditional choice for elegant events and formal settings. Pearl shimmer (Design 25), champagne-tip French (Design 9), and glazed finishes (Designs 1, 5) are particularly well-matched.
Nude Press-Ons vs Salon Acrylics
Getting nude nails at a salon — whether in gel, acrylic, or regular polish — has two limitations that press-ons address directly. First, achieving the correct nude shade for your skin tone at a salon requires either bringing your own reference or working through the salon's available inventory, which may not include the specific warm-or-cool calibration you need. Second, the search term "nude acrylics" (260 monthly searches, KD 3) reflects a genuinely common salon service — but at a cost of $45–$80 per appointment, repeated every 3–4 weeks.
Press-on nude nail sets in soft gel cost $10–$15 per set. They apply in under 10 minutes with nail glue or adhesive tabs, last 1–2 weeks with glue, and remove cleanly with warm water. The soft gel material replicates the weight, flexibility, and appearance of salon gel without UV lamps or the adhesive bond required for acrylic sets.
SHANGMENG soft gel press-on sets include 32 nails across 16 sizes — more sizes than most salon fittings provide — which means every finger gets a properly fitted nail rather than a size-up approximation. The result is a cleaner edge, better adhesion, and the precise fit that nude designs require: a nude nail that gaps at the side edges or overhangs the cuticle reads wrong regardless of the shade.
For the full range of what SHANGMENG's nude press-on line covers across shades, our soft pink nails guide covers the adjacent pale-pink category that overlaps with the warmest sheer nudes — useful for wearers who find standard nudes too beige.
FAQ
What are nude nail designs?
Nude nail designs are manicures finished in skin-tone or near-skin-tone shades — including sheer pinks, warm beiges, cool taupes, peach nudes, and milky neutrals — across any nail shape and finish. The category spans five finish families: sheer and glazed, French variations, ombré gradients, chrome and metallic, and art-accented. A nude nail design is not necessarily minimal — a nude with chrome powder or a nude ombré is technically a nude design because the colour stays within the skin-tone spectrum. Press-on nude nail sets cost $10–$15 and apply in under 10 minutes without salon visits.
What is the best nude nail shape?
The best nude nail shape depends on what you want the nude to communicate. Square gives nude the most graphic, structured character — flat tips and straight sides frame the colour precisely. Almond gives nude a romantic, elongating quality — the tapered tip makes fingers appear longer. Round is the most professional and everyday-appropriate choice — it suits every setting without creative risk. Coffin is the editorial choice — extended length plus flat tip makes nude finishes look high-fashion. Oval is the classic choice for formal events. According to Byrdie's salon consultation data, square and almond are the most requested shapes for nude finishes — square for the clean-girl aesthetic, almond for the quiet luxury aesthetic.
How do I choose a nude shade that matches my skin tone?
Match the undertone of the nude shade to the undertone of your skin, not just the overall depth. Warm undertones (golden, olive, peachy) suit warm champagne pinks, peach nudes, and honey beiges. Cool undertones (pink, bluish, neutral) suit mauve-pinks, dusty roses, and cool taupes with no yellow content. A common error is choosing a nude that matches the depth of your skin but has the wrong undertone — the result looks grey or washed-out on warm skin, or dirty on cool skin. If your nude manicure reads as "sick" rather than "groomed," the undertone is the problem, not the shade depth. Elle's beauty editors note that undertone mismatch is more visible on nude nails than on any other colour category because there is no saturation to distract from the skin contrast.
What is nude to white ombre nails?
Nude-to-white ombré nails — also called baby boomer nails or pink-and-white ombré at salons — are a gradient that blends from a warm or blush nude at the cuticle to a clean white at the tip, with no visible transition line. The result is the ombré version of a French manicure: the same colour palette as a French tip, applied as a seamless fade rather than a crisp smile line. Elle named it among the most consistently requested salon finishes of 2025. Press-on baby boomer sets replicate the seamless gradient precisely, without the sponge-blending technique required to achieve it at home.
Are nude press-on nails better than acrylics?
For most wearers, nude press-on nails in soft gel are more practical than salon acrylic nudes. Soft gel press-ons cost $10–$15 versus $45–$80 per salon acrylic appointment. Application takes under 10 minutes without UV lamps or salon visits. Wear time is 1–2 weeks with nail glue — comparable to a gel polish appointment. Removal is clean with warm water, without the acetone soak-off required for acrylics. The limitation is that press-ons cannot extend extremely short natural nails the way sculpted acrylics can. For wearers with at least a minimal nail bed, properly fitted soft gel press-ons in 16 sizes are the more practical and cost-effective route to nude nail designs.
What nude nail colors look good on dark skin?
Deep warm nudes — caramels, honey tones, cognac, and warm chocolates — are the most flattering on warm deep skin tones. Sheer nudes in pale pink or champagne often disappear against deep skin because there is insufficient contrast between the polish and the nail bed; opaque or semi-opaque coverage is needed. For cool deep skin tones, deep berry-adjacent taupes and cool chocolates read as nudes rather than as colours. Metallic accents — particularly gold foil (Design 24) and gold leaf (Design 32) — add warmth and contrast that make nude nails visually present on deep skin without departing from the neutral palette. SHANGMENG's nude press-on line is developed across the full warm-cool-depth spectrum, which is reflected in an average 4.94/5.0 rating across 454 verified purchasers with significantly varied skin tones.
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