How To Obtain A Safe Ear Piercing November 28, 2007
Posted by Pierced GlamoBaby in : Ideal PiercingFor some young people, the phrase “ideal piercing” implies the possession of a great way to show-off some lovely earrings. For such a young person, the phrase “ideal piercing” has no association with the possible after-effects of an ear piercing. That sort of attitude can guarantee an unwillingness to search for the safest piercing specialist. Someone who wants a pierced ear should have a specialist who does not work amidst a “sea” of distractions. The piercing specialist should not be expected to be performing a myriad of secretarial tasks. In the absence of the proper specialist, any ear piercing is apt to be less than ideal.
If you go in search of an ideal piercing, and you walk into a Piercing Pagoda, piercing specialists there might seem to speak in a foreign language. You might hear them use strange words such as “rook,” “daith” or “tragus.” Those are three different places where an ear piercing specialist can give a client a pierced ear.
At a Piercing Pagoda, one can feel the specialist’s tool pierce a hole in either the ear lobe or in a section of ear cartilage. Although only a small kiosk, a Piercing Pagoda offers those who enter it the assurance of a safe piercing. Each Pagoda has on its staff well-trained and skilled specialists.
Those specialists go out of their way to give each client the safest possible ear piercing. They use metal, starting earrings to which the newly pierced client is not apt to have an allergy. They generally use either hypoallergenic earrings, or earrings that have a nickel content of less than one percent.
While an ear piercing can be quick and painless, those two features alone, do not describe a safe ear piercing. If a person with a pierced ear has failed to use the proper precautions, any ear piercing could lead to unpleasant complications. If, for example, a pierced ear has not been kept clean, the pierced skin could become infected.
Of course a safe piercing does not always involve the piercing of an ear. Some of those who walk into a Piercing Pagoda hope to wear belly jewelry. They step into the Pagoda in order to get a belly (or naval) piercing.
Specialists at a Piercing Pagoda need to deal with clients of all ages. Some young mothers want their infant daughters to have pierced ears. Such a mother might go to a Piercing Pagoda.
While such a mother might get a safe piercing at an in-mall Pagoda, she should talk with the Pagoda operator about the ease with which she might obtain a replacement earring. A small infant girl might well decide to play with her new earring. That action could cause the new earring to fall off.
A mother who wants to have pierced ears on her infant daughter might want to consider visiting a doctor’s office. A doctor might stand better prepared to provide any needed replacement earring. In any case, a doctor would most certainly be equipped to provide both mother and daughter with a safe piercing.
Some individuals elect to have a piercing on the helix, the curled ridge on the outer edge of the ear lobe. Individuals who want to make a more dramatic statement might chose to have an ear piercing on the rook or the daith. Both of those spots are found above the tragus, the section of cartilage that partially covers the entrance to the ear canal.