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The Art of the PauseWhere indulgence meets immediacy, without compromise

The Art of the PauseWhere indulgence meets immediacy, without compromise

In a city where schedules outpace intentions, beauty routines are often the first casualty. A two-hour nail appointment can feel indulgent on some days and entirely unrealistic on others. It’s within this gap that Little Nakhre finds its footing. 

Founded by Dhwani Shah alongside her existing salon, Nakhre Studio (@TheNakhreStudio) , the handcrafted press-on nail brand doesn’t attempt to replace the traditional salon experience. Instead, it acknowledges a quieter reality: even those who value grooming don’t always have the time to maintain it.

“When you can, you should absolutely go to a salon and enjoy the experience,” Dhwani says. “But there are also days when that just isn’t possible and that doesn’t mean you should have to compromise on how you look.”

The idea is rooted in her own experience. During years in a fast-paced corporate role with frequent travel, Dhwani found it increasingly difficult to keep up with regular appointments. Refills were delayed, schedules shifted unpredictably, and the effort required to maintain consistency rarely aligned with the demands of her routine.

Existing alternatives offered limited reassurance. Mass-produced press-ons felt visibly artificial, overly uniform, plastic in finish, unconvincing up close. Handmade options came with their own challenges: longer wait times, inconsistent results, a reliance on standardised sizing that didn’t account for individual variation.

Little Nakhre (@littlenakhre) approaches this with a focus on refinement. Each set is handcrafted to achieve a finish closer to salon work than temporary fix. Standard sets include twelve size variations per hand, a considered departure from generic sizing while custom sets are tailored to individual measurements.

The designs themselves are intentionally restrained. Clean lines, minimal detailing, wearable finishes. Nails meant to integrate into everyday life rather than announce themselves.

What emerges is not a replacement for the salon, but an extension of it, one that responds to modern pace without drawing attention to the compromise.

In a market where convenience often signals lower quality, Little Nakhre presents a quieter proposition: that practicality and polish can, in fact, coexist.

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