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She Lost 2020 to Lockdown. India Found a Premium Nail Brand.

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Puneet Yadav
July 16, 2026  Β·  3 min read
She Lost 2020 to Lockdown. India Found a Premium Nail Brand.

One apartment. One mission. A country rethinking its nails.

Miloni Jain β€” Founder, Milonails

Mumbai Β· Age 24

Everyone remembers what they lost in 2020. Miloni remembers what she found. While the world sat locked indoors, a young woman in Mumbai sat alone with an idea she couldn’t let go of β€” and a YouTube tab open. There was no mentor to call, no course to enrol in, no one to ask whether any of it would work. But Miloni had always been artistic; her hands had always known how to make things. So she taught herself everything, tutorial by tutorial, mistake by mistake, night after night β€” how to shape a nail, cure a gel, perfect a finish β€” armed with nothing but patience and an unreasonable belief that this could become something.

It began as passion. It became a business the day she realised what she had stumbled into: a market gap hiding in plain sight.

Indian women, she saw, were stuck between two bad options. On one side, mass-produced plastic press-ons β€” too cheap, too flimsy, too fake to be worn regularly. On the other, salon nails with problems of their own: hours in the chair, recurring bills, and natural nails left weaker after every removal. Nobody was serving the woman in between β€” the one who wanted salon-quality nails without the salon’s costs.

So Miloni built the answer herself, and called it Milonails: gel press-on nails, handmade and customised, set by set. Not stamped out of a machine by the thousand β€” shaped, cured, and finished by hand, applied in minutes, worn for weeks, removed without damage, and worn again.

β€œPress-on doubt doesn’t get argued away β€” it dissolves the moment a woman watches a set go onto her own hand and asks, ‘These are press-ons?’”

What makes the story remarkable is what she carried alongside it. Miloni completed her Masters while running the business β€” studying and shipping orders in the same week β€” and the moment her degree was done, she went all in. The brand expanded digitally through its own website, then across marketplaces, then out into the real world: pop-ups, exhibitions, in-person visibility across Mumbai, winning over one skeptical shopper at a time.

Today, Milonails serves women pan-India, and thousands of them are in love with the brand β€” not just for the product, but because the brand understands their problem and connects them to the solution. Customers who start with one set come back to build occasion wardrobes: a festive set, an everyday set, a travel set. For a product once dismissed as disposable, Milonails sets are treated like good jewellery β€” kept, reused, collected.

None of it has been easy, and Miloni doesn’t pretend otherwise. Milonails is a completely bootstrapped business β€” every rupee of growth earned, not raised. Building the right team has been one of the hardest parts of the journey, and bootstrapping brings real boundaries on how fast a brand can expand into new markets. But those constraints are being dealt with the same way the first set of nails was made: patiently, resourcefully, and by hand.

The vision, though, has no such boundaries. Own premium press-ons in India first. Then carry the brand beyond β€” to every woman who deserves better than the choice between cheap plastic and an expensive appointment.

From a lockdown apartment and a YouTube tutorial to hands across India, the mission hasn’t changed.

Because great brands are built the same way great nails are.

By hand.

Milonails Β· milonails.in Β· Mumbai, India

She Lost 2020 to Lockdown. India Found a Premium Nail Brand.
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