In fashion, there are creators who chase attention—and then there are those whose work becomes indispensable without ever asking for it. Abbie belongs firmly to the latter. With over two decades of dedication to her craft, Abbie has built a career defined not by spectacle, but by intuition, restraint, and a deeply personal dialogue with color.
Her international journey formally began in 2021, when she was selected as an overseas representative at a domestic show hosted by SOUKASHI. That moment opened the doors to the world’s most demanding stages—Vogue-level fashion weeks in New York, London, Milan, and Paris—where nail art is not decoration, but detail under a microscope. From runway shows to the Rome International Film Festival red carpet and overseas music video productions, Abbie’s work has quietly shaped how movement, attitude, and styling come together.
Yet, her story began much earlier.
Where the Obsession Started

More than twenty years ago, Abbie stepped into a nail salon for the first time and experienced acrylic sculpting—not artificial nails, but form created from powder, patience, and precision. That moment left a lasting impression. What fascinated her wasn’t embellishment, but construction: how something could be built by hand, balanced by eye, and perfected through feel.
That curiosity never faded. Instead, it became the backbone of her practice.
A Conversation with Color

Abbie’s process defies convention. She deliberately avoids sketching designs. For her, form is not planned—it emerges. She describes her approach as a “conversation with color,” where hues speak, respond, and sometimes contradict one another. If a design disappears from her mind or refuses to take shape, she lets it go. To her, that means it was never essential.
This philosophy gives her work an unmistakable signature. Each piece feels instinctive, unrepeatable, and alive—less like a product and more like a moment captured.
The Strength to Stay Curious

What sets Abbie apart isn’t trend awareness or technical bravado—it’s perseverance paired with inquiry. She questions constantly, experiments endlessly, and never treats mastery as a finish line. Freelancing across fashion weeks, photo shoots, and collaborations with world-renowned dancers, she chooses projects based on one simple test: Can I see myself enjoying this process?
If the answer is yes, she commits fully—without fear of the outcome.
The Power of Being the Final Touch

Abbie sees herself as a spice. Subtle, often overlooked, but transformative.
At fashion shows, nail art can easily disappear behind silhouettes, fabrics, and movement. But she has witnessed moments when that hierarchy collapses—when models walk differently, pose differently, become different because of what’s on their fingertips. In those moments, nail design is no longer optional. It is essential.
That realization remains one of her proudest milestones: understanding that her work could quietly alter presence, posture, and performance.
Why Color Became a Language
The reason Abbie values a “conversation with color” runs deeper than aesthetics. Since childhood, she has been fascinated by the traditional cultures of countries around the world, especially those of peoples without a written language. These cultures spoke through other means: carvings, embroidery, pigments, and symbolic forms that carried memory, identity, and emotion without words. Color was not decorative; it was communicative. That silent yet powerful mode of expression left a lasting imprint on her. Today, it continues to shape the world she creates – where color is treated not as an accent, but as a language in itself, capable of holding meaning, intention, and history.

Redefining Success

Ask Abbie what success means, and she won’t give you a neat answer. To her, success isn’t arrival—it’s continuity. Not losing curiosity. Not stopping. Each goal simply leads to the next, and the moment success becomes visible, she worries it might signal an ending. Perhaps that’s why she keeps moving forward without naming it.
Looking Ahead

Her future vision is both sensitive and radical. Abbie is deeply inspired by the colors created by people with disabilities—their delicacy, nuance, and infinite variation. She hopes to build a team that integrates these perspectives into fashion shows and photo shoots, expanding the definition of authorship in nail design. Through this, she aims to communicate value—not just aesthetic value, but human value—through color.

In an industry that often celebrates the loudest voice, Abbie’s work reminds us of something rarer: that true impact doesn’t demand attention. It earns it—one thoughtful detail at a time.
