Body Jewellery – Precautions While Using the Body Jewellery
Jun 29th, 2010 by admin
When body jewellery and body piercing was introduced in different pop cultures and in prevailing societies, lot of people tried this new fashion. It was at first, not well to do, but as the time passed, their way of thought was changed. When people see others using these items and realized that how cool it looks and add charms in the personality, many people started buying and using it. It is now immensely available in both high and low prices. Usually the high priced jewellery is made with precious metals and gems like gold and silver with diamonds (cubic zirconia) where low priced jewellery is made up with stainless steel, nickel etc.
Nowadays body jewellery is not extensively produced with expensive materials because it has become very simple to get cheap jewellery without getting complex styles. Recently, manufactures have supplied large variety of cheap jewellery in beautiful designs so that everyone can use it. In the past jewellery items like rings, necklaces, bracelets and earrings were made with precious metals and not every one was able to purchase these precious items. But, now all these items are available in artificial metals, which look more beautiful, affordable and are preferred mostly.
All the jewellery whether it is expensive or low priced looks beautiful and fashionable as well, but you must select those pieces that protect you from infection of piercing. When any part of body gets pierced for the first time, you are advised to use best quality metals of jewellery because after piercing, body needs to heal properly. If low quality metals are used in jewellery then it can create infections and complications.
It is more important for those body areas that remain wet like tongue, lip and genital areas, because these parts are highly susceptible to infections. These areas need truly high care while healing. In the beginning you should use quality metals that are not harmful. When once the piercing is healed then you can diversify towards cheap jewellery. You must not wear the precious metals like gold and silver at the start. Sterilized stainless steel is recommended initially which will definitely protect you from complications. After healing you are free to wear anything you want to.
You should select the body jewellery from famous and reputable stores and must read the details tagged with the jewellery or written behind the pack that what kind of materials are used to make it. Inspect carefully before purchasing it. Body jewellery is that jewellery which becomes a part of your body. So you must buy the pieces that fit, match and are safe to wear.
Body jewellery is a newly introduced fashion, so many people are not properly aware of it. And people, who know a bit, don’t know from where to buy, where to wear and how to wear. If they want to wear this jewellery then they must make a search from the web that will extensively provide true information. They can surf about its nature, merits, demerits, kinds, and many more. They can change their decisions when they will see it on the net because it needs piercing.
Imran ali
http://www.articlesbase.com/jewelry-articles/body-jewellery-precautions-while-using-the-body-jewellery-684015.html
Youd think a Miss America swimsuit winner would feel completely confident about her body, right? Not always! So I decided to write the book I wish Id had as a teen and in college an honest, funny, practical, medically accurate, totally reassuring guide to how womens bodies actually look, smell, feel, behave, and change. Alongside real-deal photographs of women just like you and me (no airbrushing, no supermodels, no kidding) youll find medical pictures of things you need to be able to recognize, true confessions by yours truly, and the encouragement you need to appreciate the uniqueness, strength, and beauty of your body.
Youd think a Miss America swimsuit winner would feel completely confident about her body, right? Not always! So I decided to write the book I wish Id had as a teen and in college an honest, funny, practical, medically accurate, totally reassuring guide to how womens bodies actually look, smell, feel, behave, and change. Alongside real-deal photographs of women just like you and me (no airbrushing, no supermodels, no kidding) youll find medical pictures of things you need to be able to recognize, true confessions by yours truly, and the encouragement you need to appreciate the uniqueness, strength, and beauty of your body. 
How do you clean corset piercings?
How do you properly clean permanent corset piercings when they are located on your back?
I have been wanting to get permanent corset piercings for a while now, and am trying to research as much as I can about the process including:
the consultation with the professional artist
the body jewelry used
detailed descriptions on how the piercing is preformed
how many should be done at once
precautions that reduce the risk of rejection
aftercare for the piercing
average overall cost
I have also had problems finding a website that describes in detail how the piercing is done.
If you know of any credible websites that would help answer some of my questions I would really appreciate it.
Like all surface piercings, corsets aren’t to be considered permanent hun. They are pretty much guaranteed to reject even if proper surface bars are used.
You may have a slightly higher chance of healing them if you have them done with microdermal anchors, but these can be unstable too, they’re fairly hard to get to heal flush against the skin; and they can reject if they’re in a high traffic area. However if you want something permanent, this is really your only option.
Cleaning will be tricky, you way want to get a sister, parent, friend, or significant other to help out.
You’ll consult with a piercer, you can probably just walk in for this. Like I said you can either have them done as a surface piercing with surface bars, which will reject, or microdermal implants, which might reject. How it’s performed depends on which you get. How many to be done at once depends on what your piercer recommends, but if you want a bunch, I can’t imagine you’d have them all done at once. There’s nothing you can do to reduce the risk of rejection with surface piercings, it’s due to the nature of the piercing, not improper care. You’ll clean the piercings with sea salt soaks, your piercer should go over this. The cost will vary depending on where you go, but I’d say no less than $60 for each surface piercing or microdermal anchor, that could get expensive fast; your piercer might cut you a small price break since you’re getting quite a few done.
Go to http://www.bmezine.com , it’s a website with a ton of first hand piercing experiences.
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