1 /5 Bruna Rodilhano: A Thoroughly Regrettable Encounter at Beauty Art Kingston – An Exercise in Arrogance, Apathy, and Awful Manicures
Review:
It is with great reluctance that I recount my experience at Beauty Art Kingston, a place I once frequented years ago, back when, dare I say, standards were evidently upheld by a previous ownership. Fast forward to today, and the establishment appears to have been handed over to individuals with the professional grace of a rusty doorknob.
Let us begin with the protagonist of this delightful tale – the owner’s wife (or so she proudly declares herself), a thin, perpetually scowling woman of East Asian origin who, despite her limited command of the English language, possesses an alarmingly fluent talent for hostility – especially towards fellow immigrants. How ironic.
Her customer service style could be best described as a blend of passive-aggressive disdain and overt xenophobia. She seems to reserve a special brand of contempt for those she believes beneath her – though, judging by the atmosphere of the salon (eternally empty, save for one miserable customer and an eyebrow-threading lady with the charm of a wet sponge), I’d suggest that arrogance is an ill-fitting cloak.
But I digress.
Having suffered an incident last year where prices magically inflated at the till (£1 here, £1 there – a subtle yet repugnant trick), I vowed never to return. Alas, today, with a business dinner looming and no appointments elsewhere, I returned out of sheer necessity. Poor judgement, I know.
I was told the wait would be five minutes. It wasn’t. But exhaustion and heat prevailed, and I tolerated her dagger-like stares and whispered exchanges with her husband in a language not meant for client comprehension. The atmosphere was not merely unfriendly – it was positively suffocating.
Now, for the pièce de résistance: the "manicure" itself. A laughable attempt, lasting no more than eight minutes. No cuticle work, no care, no finesse – merely a rapid removal of old polish, followed by an insistence that I pay in advance, under the pretext that non-shellac polish might smudge post-payment. Truly imaginative. Never mind the fact that she had no idea whether I’d use cash or contactless. Her paranoia was palpable – as though I might abscond over a £12 bill. Charming.
What followed was nothing short of farcical. She snatched my mobile phone from the table with such haste that she smudged two nails – and then, with all the grace of a tabloid drama queen, began ranting (in her language, of course) to her husband, casting furtive glances at me. Perhaps I should feel flattered to be the subject of such attention?
The husband, red-faced and clearly embarrassed, was summoned to repaint the damage. By this point, my patience was threadbare. My nails required more time to dry than the entirety of the "treatment".
I left the salon both appalled and vindicated – I had, after all, predicted this outcome. I took photographs of her masterpiece – a glorified mess unworthy of a trainee, let alone the "wife of the proprietor".
To my fellow residents of Kingston and beyond, consider this a public service announcement: avoid this place like one avoids unsalted tea or warm Chardonnay. The service is contemptuous, the hygiene questionable, and the attitude – utterly repellent. Unless, of course, you enjoy being judged, ignored, and rushed out with nails that resemble a toddler’s art project.
To the owner’s wife – may I humbly suggest a career change? Perhaps something that doesn’t involve people, polish, or, ideally, public interaction.