The BR of Hands & Feet

ingredient-led manicures, skin health, and the end of the traditional soak.

There are two kinds of nail appointments. The kind you forget. And the kind that quietly resets your standards. This is the latter.

At Club House, we treat manicures and pedicures like skincare. Elim is the closest thing we have found to doing that properly. Think Biologique Recherche, but for hands and feet. Skincare-informed, ingredient-led, and entirely results focused. A facial, disguised as a Mani-Pedi.

Elim replaces soaking and aggressive filing with active ingredients that actually treat the skin. Exfoliation through actives, not friction. PH balancing instead of guesswork. Controlled removal without abrasives. Less friction. Better skin.

Why It Matters

You will notice the difference immediately. You will understand it a few days later. Skin stays softer. Callus buildup reduces over time. Nails and cuticles look healthier, even without polish. For more advanced calluses, this is not a one-visit fix. Most guests and members see a clear improvement after one treatment, but full correction can take a few consistent appointments depending on the level of buildup and lifestyle. We approach it like skincare. Not a quick fix.

A chic Standard Worth Noting

Elim recently launched as a residency inside Selfridges. Not entirely surprising. The best beauty spaces tend to move toward systems that prioritize long-term skin condition over temporary results.

The Club House Way

Every treatment at Club House is built around the same philosophy: Steam, not soaking. Hot towel service, not rushed rinses. Actives, not filler steps. You can leave polished. Or not. Either way, your hands and feet should look better without anything on them. It’s subtle. Until it’s not. Elim is now available across all Club House manicures and pedicures.

xx, Ashley

Editor, The Club Bulletin || Co-Founder, Club House

Ashley Palumbo is the co-founder of Club House, a hospitality-driven nail studio redefining modern manicure culture through a skincare-informed approach to nail health. She holds a degree in chemistry and spent nearly two decades in healthcare consulting and customer experience strategy before launching Club House and The Club Bulletin, an editorial publication exploring modern beauty, nail health, hospitality, lifestyle, and cultural trends.

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