Party for Up to Five or Ten Children at Pamper Me Cute Mobile Kids Spa (Up to 48% Off).
Similar deals
Kids spa events organized either at home or on location are unique and memorable way to celebrate birthdays with girl-friends
Choice of:
Party for Up to Five Children Ages 4-14
Includes:
- Spatastic birthday toast
- Robes to be worn for duration of party
- Mini mani and pedi
- Pampered mini hand massage
- Face mask
- Cucumber eye treatment
- Tiara for the guest of honor
- Karaoke and spa themed craft of choice
- Spa themed goody bags
Party for Up to Ten Children Ages 4-14
Includes:
- Spatastic birthday toast
- Robes to be worn for duration of party
- Mini mani and pedi
- Pampered mini hand massage
- Face mask
- Cucumber eye treatment
- Tiara for the guest of honor
- Karaoke or fashion show with pink carpet runway and accessories
- Spa themed craft of choice
- Customized birthday sash
- Glitter glam makeup (shimmer eye shadow, perfect blush, and lip gloss)
- Spa themed goody bags
Nail Art: Accessories at Your Fingertips
Nail art takes manicures a step further than simple nail polish. Check out Groupon’s guide to learn more about this timeless trend.
Whether acrylic or natural, decorative nails can define a style as well as a well-stocked wardrobe. Going beyond the solid-color design of traditional nail polish, artists punch up fingernails with intricate details ranging from marbleized patterns to colorful stickers. Nail art can also incorporate three-dimensional elements such as miniature bows, flowers, or gemstones—patterns that literally pop and make it easier for nails to snag tricky soda-can tabs.
Nail art is hardly a new trend. Many historians believe Egyptian and Indian women decorated their fingertips with henna as early as 5000–3000 BC, and Chinese aristocrats from the Chou Dynasty covered their nails with protective jeweled guards reminiscent of today’s acrylic nails. In the New World, the Incans were marking their fingers with pictures of eagles as early as the 15th century. In fact, solid-color nail polish in its modern form wasn’t invented until the early 1900s, when it was at first a fairly unorthodox fashion itself. According to scholars, one of the first notable women to publicly display fully painted nails was that undisputed arbiter of 1940s taste—Eleanor Roosevelt.