Irish Daily Mail

Try the clever new mani trend that can blow away the blues

- Hannah Betts Better...not younger

LIFE is back to normal now, or so people keep telling me. Is it, though? Really? I don’t know about you, but I feel flat, quashed.

The word that keeps springing to mind is ‘anhedonia’, meaning the inability to experience pleasure. The pandemic may be over, but we are so beaten down that in its place has come a listlessne­ss.

There’s a lot of talk about ‘dopamine dressing’ — colour as the currency via which we can improve the collective mood. It’s as if, inspired by all those rainbows, we made a decision to become the rainbow. And this makes perfect sense after so much time spent cruising along in neutrals.

Still, a wardrobe overhaul sounds like a lot of effort. How about starting smaller with dopamine nails? Manicures are always joy-inducing, never more so than when saturated with colour.

Of late, I have found myself craving any shade so long as it’s blue, from cerulean to cobalt, electric to the Yves Klein-inspired ‘Internatio­nal Klein Blue’. I want the blue of hyacinths, forget-menots, blue skies, the sea, Titian’s ultramarin­e and the lapis lazuli ring I have my eye on.

I ask Jules Standish, author of A Colourful Dose Of Optimism, why this might be.

‘There’s a reason blue is always voted the world’s favourite colour,’ she explains.

‘It is calming and soothing, lifting your mood and releasing those happy, feel-good hormones, dopamine and serotonin.’

ALL eyes possess a receptor to sense blue light, even those who are non-sighted. We need it to set our circadian rhythm and provide us with energy.

What is more, it turns out that I am brilliantl­y on trend. Blue nails are busting out all over social media and have been spotted on Cara Delevingne, Miranda Kerr, Harry Styles, Jessica Alba and Emilia Clarke.

I am sporting them at 51, as are my 23-year-old neighbour, my three and 17-year-old nieces, and the thirty-something fashionist­a I just interviewe­d.

It is, as the young would call it, ‘a vibe’, and the thing about being part of a vibe is that it will make midlifers look current, modish, young. Forget a face-lift — get yourself a set of true-blue talons. Vegan nail brand Peacci confirms that Google searches for ‘blue nail designs’ are up by 70 per cent in the past year.

This is not the baby blue that took TikTok by storm in 2021, or autumn’s cobalt, mind, but an electric shade that makes for a power-packed statement claw.

Peacci traces the trend back to manicurist Harriet Westmorela­nd’s Instagram feed, and her coining of the term #Baderblue, in reference to the packaging of Augustinus Bader’s cult The Rich Cream.

The Peacci people offer Prussian Blue (€12, peacci.com), a deep navy with a subtle shimmer, and a dazzling Electric Blue (€12), both of which look sensationa­l in a bluetipped French manicure.

Or there’s Palace (€12), a subdued cornflower, and Blueberry (€12), a cool, dark, yet equally flattering shade when worn against the warmth of a tan for a rock-chick edge.

If you’re indulging in the TikTok craze of wearing a different shade of blue on each nail, then this will be your darkest hue.

There is a blue to suit all skin tones, but I wouldn’t be too prescripti­ve about what this should, or shouldn’t, be — just pick the colour that brings you the most bliss. An entry-level shade might be Essie’s Salt Water Happy Baby Blue Nail Polish (€9.99, boots.ie), a stylish and subtle pale blue.

Nails Inc boasts the gorgeous, powdery Soul Surfing (€9, nailsinc.com) and the fabulously uplifting Inner Peace of Me (€9). Or, for the reassuring chic of Chanel, try its limited-edition Rhythm (€28, brownthoma­s. com), a rich, inky delight.

The favourites I keep coming back to are Mavala’s Santa Monica Nail Polish (€6.45, beautyexpe­rt.com), a Titian blue, and Kiko Milano’s Smart Nail Lacquer in Iridescent Violet Blue (€4.49, kikocosmet­ics.com).

On the other hand, now that everyone and their dog is rocking blue, I’m beginning to ‘feel’ yellow. Behold, Mavala’s resolutely sunny Lemon Drop (€6.45, beautyexpe­rt.com), hitting my hands today in the hope that some actual sunshine follows.

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