GRAZIA
“Grazia has gone bananas about WAH – the cult East London nail salon. And looking at the pictures here, you can see why. Not only does WAH promise to ‘translate fashion trends into fingertip art’, but having a WAH manicure is the most delightful experience”

VOGUE
“Dalston’s coolest nail salon/gallery/shop”

THE NEW YORK TIMES
“WAH Nails, East London’s first hipster nail bar, is sure to be a fixture at London Fashion Week’s off-schedule shows”

THE INDEPENDENT
“Founder Sharmadean Reid is one of the 15 people who will define the future of arts in Britain”

WAH started life in 2005 as a little London-based fanzine about girls in hip-hop, championing those that were contributing to the music and clothing scene and providing a space for a new wave of street smart feminism. This developed into the WAHappenings blog, events such as the WAH Power Lunch, and a international community of girls who loved their Nike sneakers as much as their Prada wedges.

In 2008, founder Sharmadean Reid had an inkling that the nail art she and her friends had been sporting for years was about to hit the mainstream (and having working as a trend consultant since graduating from Central St Martins, she should know!) After another bad experience at a local nail salon (they refused to do the Dior double french) she decided she was going to open her own salon where you could have “Whatever you wanted on your fingertips” and of course, it would be called WAH Nails.

On August 1st 2009, WAH Nails opened its doors in the East End of London to a raptuous reception from the press. A trickle of nail art fans turned into a flood of customers as we became the go-to salon for fashion forward nails. But the salon wasn’t just for getting your talons painted! There were jumble sales, record launch parties, art shows and film nights, retaining that community spirit that was set with the fanzine and reminding the world that Dalston was the coolest place to be.

The rest of 2009 was a whirlwind of activity, as WAH Nails did shows at London Fashion Week, parties for huge brands such as Nike, Marc Jacobs and Diesel, had a successful week-long pop up salon in Selfridges. Sharmadean was named one of the “15 people who will define the future of arts in Britain” and was featured as part of the “New Generation” in Vogue magazine. Surely it can’t get better than that right? Oh but it did…

In February 2010, WAH Nails opened for business in Topshop Oxford Circus. In one of the busiest, coolest shopping meccas in the world, a tiny little salon from the grubby part of London made its mark. Even when the imitators kept trying to catch up, WAH Nails kept on innovating and the Topshop branch is now choc-a-bloc with loyal customers who know where the good stuffs at. Other stores were quick to snap them up and they opened in Harvey Nichols in Dublin later on that year as well as giving Japan a taster of handpainted nail art by doing a party at Opening Ceremony Tokyo.

WAH has painted nails in cars, bars, clubs, at the Grand Prix, in an Airstream, in Japan, at festivals, at The Brits, for celebrities, for fashion people, for kids, for music videos, at work and at home. You name it, they’ve done it. All in the name of happy nails. They’e grown from a staff of 2 to a team of twenty and now they’re look set to grow even bigger as we launch our range of nail products WAH London.

WAH LONDON NAIL CARE LINE IS A FULL STAND-ALONE RANGE CREATED BY SHARMADEAN REID OF WAH NAILS SALON. TAKING ITS INSPIRATION FROM A UNIQUE BLEND OF FASHION, STREET STYLE, ART AND TECHNOLOGY, WAH LONDON HAS CREATED EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO PERFORM NAIL ART AND NAIL CARE AT HOME. 

“I wanted to create a full line that mixes beauty, art and technology together while retaining my roots. I’ve been meticulous about everything from the polish names to the nail pen design to keep it true to our culture. The WAH Girl is comfortable being both uptown and downtown and the WAH London nail polishes reflect this in premium products with a hip-hop, punky, art school twist.“ 
- SHARMADEAN REID