Thursday, November 3, 2011

Body Piercings and Regret

Body piercing is when a hole is made in your skin or through a part of your body so you can add a piece of jewelry for decoration. Body piercings have developed into an art form, and they are popular among many different cultures and societies today. Some of the most common piercings today are the navel, eyebrows, ears, and tongue. The less popular are male and female genital piercings, nipples, and septum. These maybe less popular than the others but they are still being done.

Safety Precautions To Take When Getting A Nose Piercing

Getting a nose piercing can be an exciting time for self expression. If you are considering having this work done, then you should pay particularly close attention to safety precautions. The last thing you want to have to deal with is a nose piercing bump or nose piercing scar. These can become unsightly and can take attention away from the desired effect of the piercing itself. While there are many people out there, who may be willing to do the work for you on the cheap, your first commitment must be to quality and not to cost. After all, a bump or a scar can be a hard thing to conceal or get rid of, and you may never be able to do it fully. So instead, take heed of the following safety precautions, and your venture into piercing will be a healthy and successful one.

Cartilage Piercing Is a Popular Form of Ear Piercing

Normal ear lobe piercing has been popular for many decades in various civilizations, if not for centuries. Using pierced earlobes to hold decorations such as earrings and danglers is the most common form of body jewellery after finger rings, although it has lately become fashionable to use other parts of the ear, or even of the body, in order to be different. The tragus was the obvious candidate for this, and tragus piercings have risen in popularity over the past several years.

What is Cartilage Piercing?

The History and Culture of Stretched Ears

People have been decorating and making changes to the appearance of their bodies since recorded history began. This has taken many forms through the ages, such as tattooing, piercing, stretching, scarring, branding, muscle sculpture, hair styling and many more, and for almost as many different reasons.

The three major purposes of these forms of body modification have historically been tribal (to display allegiance to one tribe or group of people), in war (to scare the enemy and distinguish friend from foe), and for fashion and perceived beauty. Ear stretching has been popular for centuries, but this popularity has increased in Western culture in recent years.