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  2. Body jewelry sizes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Body_jewelry_sizes

    Items of body piercing jewelry have an important common factor: the diameter of the part of the item of jewelry where it will rest in the piercing site. With the wearing of European-traditional kinds of earrings, that thickness is not an issue, because jewelry is made to use only thin wire for support, and the wearer need only have a narrow piercing hole to accommodate it.

  3. Stretching (body piercing) - Wikipedia

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

    In North America, most stretching methods go up by a single even-sized gauge increment at a time. 0g (8 mm [4]), is generally considered to be "the point of no return": [5] a hole larger than this size will rarely close to a standard piercing size. Since each body is different, any stretched piercings, no matter the size, should be approached ...

  4. Body piercing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Body_piercing

    The needle selected is typically the same gauge (or sometimes larger as with cartilage piercings) as the initial jewelry to be worn, with higher gauges indicating thinner needles. The needle is inserted into the body part being pierced, frequently by hand but sometimes with the aid of a needle holder or pusher.

  5. Ear piercing instrument - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ear_piercing_instrument

    Another design for a hand-pressure ear-piercing instrument is Coren, [8] which comprises a small U-shaped plastic holder pre-loaded with a standard 16-gauge ear-piercing stud in one arm of the device and the clasp in the other. To pierce the ear, the operator closes the instrument around the earlobe, aligning the point of the stud with the mark ...

  6. Cartilage piercing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cartilage_piercing

    A cartilage piercing can refer to any area of cartilage on the body with a perforation created for the purpose of wearing jewelry. The two most common areas with cartilage piercings are the ear and the nose. Outside of the body modification community, many people commonly refer to a helix piercing as a "cartilage piercing."

  7. Earring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earring

    Piercing the cartilage of the ear with an ear-piercing instrument has been known to shatter the cartilage and lead to more serious complications. An alternative method that has been growing in popularity since the 1990s is the use of the same hollow piercing needles that are used in body piercing. Some piercers may use a forceps or clamp to ...