There isn’t a single universal label for “a person who has nails like that,” because it depends on the type of nails you’re referring to. People describe it in different ways:
1. If the nails are long, sharp, or pointed
- Informal term: “claws”
- More descriptive comparison: “talon-like nails”
- Sometimes people jokingly call the person “clawed hands” or say they “have claws”
This is just appearance-based language, not an official term.
2. If the nails are artificial (fashion nails)
If the person has salon-made or decorative nails:
- Acrylic nails wearer
- Gel nails wearer
- Nail extensions wearer
- Sometimes just called someone with a manicure
These are cosmetic styles, very common in fashion.
3. If the nails look unusually thick, curved, or overgrown (medical cases)
In medical language (not a nickname for the person, but for the condition):
- Onychogryphosis (thick, curved “ram’s horn” nails)
- General term: nail deformity
4. If someone is just describing them casually
People might simply say:
- “She has long nails”
- “He has sharp nails”
- “She wears fake nails”
Important point
There is no formal word for the person themselves based only on nails. It’s always descriptive (claws, acrylic nails wearer, etc.), not a true label like a profession or identity.
If you want, tell me what the nails looked like (long, fake, curled, black, etc.), and I can give you the exact term people usually use in that specific case.