By Shape & Length
Ideas that match your nails right now, with guidance for short, medium, long, and each shape's best design angles.
About by shape & length
Almond nails are my favorite way to wear red because they shape the whole look. In this By Shape & Length section, we focus on almond silhouettes and the exact length that fits how you live - from short red almond nails you can type in without thinking, to longer almond ideas that look extra glossy with a deeper shade. We also cover red French tips on almonds, cherry red for that classic "put-together" vibe, and design sets like tortoise shell French tips when you want something that feels autumnal without going brown-red heavy. To choose between the ideas, start with two things: your natural nail length and your comfort with point. If your nail beds run short, a shorter almond (think a soft taper with a small, rounded tip) keeps red looking crisp instead of "too much." If you already have length, you can go sharper with the almond point and let the color deepen at the sides. Same with French tips - on almonds, the tip width should follow the nail's curve. If the tip is too wide, it makes the almond look stubby. Two pointers from what I've done at my own appointments and at-home sets: first, keep the red application clean at the sidewalls. Almonds show every ridge along the edges. Second, choose your top coat like you mean it - a thicker, high-gloss top coat makes deep cherry reds look smooth and glassy instead of slightly dry.
Short almond nails need a different approach than long ones. If you're going short, keep the almond taper subtle and avoid over-thinning the tip - that's where breaks happen. For longer almond nails, I like a slightly more controlled apex (the highest point of the nail) so the nail feels sturdy, not flimsy. Red French tips also look best when the smile line is crisp and centered before you cure. If you're unsure, do one nail as a test and adjust the tip curve from there.























