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  2. Stretching (body piercing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stretching_(body_piercing)

    Stretching, in the context of body piercing, is the deliberate expansion of a healed piercing for the purpose of wearing certain types of jewelry. Ear piercings are the most commonly stretched piercings, [1] with nasal septum piercings, tongue piercings and lip piercings/lip plates following close behind. [2]

  3. Body jewelry sizes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Body_jewelry_sizes

    But with body jewelry, there is a wide variety of possible sizes, and wearers generally want jewelry that is the same size as their piercing site. Some wearers want increasingly larger sizes to deliberately stretch the hole. So that wearers can choose the size they want, there are standards for body jewelry sizes, used by jewelry makers and ...

  4. Plug (jewellery) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plug_(jewellery)

    Surgical steel flesh tunnels in four different gauges. A flesh tunnel is a hollow, tube-shaped variety of body piercing jewelry. It is also sometimes referred to as a spool, fleshy, earlet, expander, or eyelet. A flesh tunnel is usually used in stretched or scalpelled piercings. Flesh tunnels are made in smaller gauges.

  5. Earring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earring

    An ear spiral is a thick spiral that is usually worn through the earlobe. It is worn in ears that have been stretched and normally held in place only by its own downward pressure. Glass ear spirals are shown but many materials are used. Some designs are quite ornate and may include decorative appendages flaring from the underlying concentric ...

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  7. Scalpelling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scalpelling

    Scalpelling is performed to quickly achieve a large-gauge piercing, when scar tissue is preventing further stretching, if tissue has thinned to the point where further stretching could cause it to break, or to combine two closely placed piercings into one hole. [2]