The 8 Biggest Manicure Trends For Summer 2024

The 8 Biggest Manicure Trends For Summer 2024

Instagram/@samrosenails

Bright shades, juicy finishes, and whimsical designs for your fingertips.

NYLON: Kylie Jenner may just have been trying to show off her new Kylie Cosmetics wares on her TikTok, but the real star of her 30-second cream blush tutorial was actually her pastel chrome manicure, color-shifting and shimmering with her every hand movement. The look was everything summer nails should be — colorful, playful, and with a shiny finish that looks even better in the sunlight.

Summer 2024’s biggest nail trends are all delivering the same fun, vacation-ready opulence. Think juicy jelly nails, eye-popping colors, and metallic charms. Because whether you’re taking your mani on a trip to St. Tropez or just staring at your hands on your keyboard all day long, your summertime nails should still evoke a burst of joy. Read on for the eight summer nail color and art ideas that you’ll want to take straight to the salon this season.

GLOSSY JELLY NAILS

Editorial nail artist Jin Soon says that jelly nails have a quality of lightness that feels refreshing for summer, as opposed to the deep colors and creamy polishes of other seasons. “The jelly-like appearance is both vibrant and soft,” Soon says, “the finish is perfect for creating a modern-looking manicure.” To better show off the translucent effect, adding a design to the nail (like airbrush art or even simple dots or lines) under the jelly top coat will really show off the depth of color.

BUTTER YELLOW

We told you first: Butter yellow is going to be everywhere this summer. Painting your nails a soft lemon shade will add an instant dose of radiant positivity to every outfit.

PASTEL CHROME

People have been all about chrome powder manicures ever since Hailey Bieber kicked off the glazed donut nail trend, but this season we’re getting a new summery spin on the look. Zola Ganzorigt (the originator of glazed donut nails) recently created this pastel chrome look for Kylie Jenner using a different base tone and chrome powder shade combo on every nail to give the most opalescent effect. For a similar look in a bottled polish, nail artist Miss Pop recommends Zoya’s iridescent nail polish in the shade Leia. “A shimmery summer mani is made to catch all the sun,” she says.

ORBITING OUTLINES

Forgo expected nail art in favor of a design focused on the outer perimeter of your nails. Outlining around the nail edge gives your manicure a futuristic dimensional look, but it’s also a surprisingly chic way to highlight elongated almond-shaped nails.

RADIOACTIVE GREEN

COURTESY OF BRITTNEY BOYCE

COURTESY OF ZOLA GANZORIGT

One nail color you won’t be able to miss this summer is a vibrant green that is so bright, it almost looks like it gives off energy. (In fact, Hailey Bieber’s Coachella manicure does glow in the dark.)

THE FLAMING FRENCH

COURTESY OF BRITTNEY BOYCE

Nail artist Brittney Boyce says this Y2K-flame-design twist on a French manicure is going to be huge this summer. “It’s cool, but it’s not so out-there that people are intimidated to try it,” she says. Stick to classic French manicure-compatible white and pastel shades for a subtle look or go bold with bright colors and metallics for a more punk vibe.

BLUES FOR DAYS

Miss Pop can’t get enough of blue nail colors in the summer. “Cobalt, baby, periwinkle, or with a shimmer — all the shades as long as they’re blue!” she says. If your mani is the same color as the sky, the sea, or stone (à la Alix Earle’s “stone nails”) you’re totally on trend.

3D SILVER CHARMS

Courtesy of Brittney Boyce

You can give any nail color or design an edgier feel by accessorizing with jewelry-like metal embellishments, advises Boyce. A few properly placed studs, piercings, or baubles can take a chrome finish from space-age to heavy metal, or give a simple neutral mani a rock and roll flourish.

by Sam Neibart

Is Eyeshadow An “Old-Lady Thing?”

Is Eyeshadow An “Old-Lady Thing?”

NYLON’s beauty editor weighs in on the Gen-Z/millennial divide when it comes to going-out makeup.

BEAUTY: I’m not normally one to fear the churn of the trend cycle — if someone wants to bring back low-rise jeans and flared yoga pants, let them. But recently, I learned that my attitude wasn’t quite so casual when I was hit with a paralyzing, paradigm-shifting beauty revelation: We are, apparently, facing the potential end of eyeshadow.

As a beauty editor, I feel like I’m the last one to find out that eyeshadow is allegedly over. The first sign was when I was recently at The Spaniard in the West Village, where the crowd generally falls on the southside of the millennial-Gen Z cusp. I was wearing a full-on shimmery mint-green eyecourtesy of a gorgeous Pat McGrath Labs palette, but I couldn’t help but notice that everywhere I looked, there were only very bare lids. Soon after, I was served a now-viral TikTok video in which creator Jennifer Latch says her daughter “just told me that eyeshadow is a Gen X and millennial thing, aka an old-lady thing.” (The surrounding discussion is, tellingly, only millennials in an uproar — or offering ways to modernize their application based on this shocking information.)

I love all makeup, but I love eyeshadow the most — it’s also by far the makeup I get the most compliments on (perhaps from millennials, but still). And for as long as I can remember, applying powdered pigments to your eyelids — especially of the smokey, colorful, or glittery variety — has always equaled fun. It signifies getting dressed up and going out, we were taught in the aughts and 2010s. Good skin is nice, sure, but it’s not the centerpiece of a “look.” Lipstick is cool, but it’s prone to smudging or coming off on the rims of glasses. Eyeshadow, in comparison, is pretty, draws attention to your gaze, generally stays in place, and says “I’m here to have a good time.” Sometimes the best part of the night is getting ready with your friends, listening to music, and blending out dark shadow in the outer corners of your eyes. How could we have strayed so far from the light?

To confirm this chilling news, I accessed my own Gen-Z data bank: my 21-year-old cousin. “If I saw a smokey eye, I would think that they are definitely older,” she says, though she adds that she has nothing against them (probably to soothe me). “I might wear it if someone was doing it for me for an occasion — but it’s just a lot of work for just going out.” Her preferred nighttime look, she says, is dewy and clean: maybe some eyeliner, but at most a little bronzer swept across her eyelids. All her friends subscribe to the “less is more” approach Sofia Richie Grainge and Alix Earle have popularized.

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - FEBRUARY 01: Sofia Richie attends the 2024 Warner Music Group Pre-GRAMMY P...

SOFIA RICHIE GRAINGEDAVID LIVINGSTON/GETTY IMAGES ENTERTAINMENT/GETTY IMAGES

PARIS, FRANCE - FEBRUARY 28: Alix Earle attends the Balmain Womenswear Fall/Winter 2024-2025 show as...

ALIX EARLEPASCAL LE SEGRETAIN/GETTY IMAGES ENTERTAINMENT/GETTY IMAGES

Mentally, I wonder where the fun has gone, but as we talk, I start to get it. Part of the appeal is the perceived breeziness: If your “day” and “night” looks are one and the same, you don’t need to get ready because you are ready. But maybe the bigger reason is that the way we live has become so drastically different that the very idea of separation in the day is now outdated.

Millennials grew up going to class in the morning and going out at night; then, as adults, we commuted to offices where, at 5 p.m., we’d throw on a lip or eye at our desks to meet our friends for drinks. Every women’s magazine told us about tweaking our outfits and makeup to go from day to night, but it was also the real structure of our lives. But in the post-COVID era, fewer of us leave the house at 9 a.m. and come back late anymore. Work and free time have all merged into one, with the same comfy clothes and unchanging makeup — which some may find freeing, but to me feels monotonous.

So while it feels odd to accept that we’re no longer the youngest, coolest generation anymore, I can also cherish how I learned about makeup (and life) the way I did. And yes — to no one’s surprise, I, for one, will be holding onto my eyeshadow. Even if Gen Z is now making fun of us for our old-lady makeup and “wearing business casual to the club,” at least we were going to the club at all.

SHOP NYLON-APPROVED EYESHADOWS

MTHRSHP Bijoux Brilliance Palette in Starstruck Splendour
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Ethereal Eyes Eyeshadow Palette
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ICYMI

MIA 40 years of Art in Bloom – Minneapolis, MN

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