Are Gold Piercings Safe During Healing?
Gold piercings are timeless. The warm tone, the heritage feel, the way they catch light. But not all "gold" jewellery is created equal, and the wrong gold piece in a fresh piercing can sabotage healing for months. Quick Answer Solid 14-karat or higher nickel-free yellow gold from a reputable source is one of only three materials approved by the Association of Professional Piercers for fresh piercings. Gold-plated jewellery is not safe for healing — the plating wears off and exposes nickel-containing base metal directly to the wound. PVD gold-coated titanium is a safer and more durable alternative. Solid Gold vs...
Niobium vs Titanium: Which is Right for You?
If you have shopped for premium body jewellery, you have probably seen niobium pieces sitting alongside the titanium options. Both metals are biocompatible, both are nickel-free, both are recommended by professional piercers. So how do they actually differ? Quick Answer Niobium and implant-grade titanium are both biocompatible, nickel-free metals safe for fresh piercings. Titanium ASTM F-136 is the global standard, lighter, more affordable and widely available. Niobium is denser, slightly more expensive, often considered even more inert, and can be anodised in a wider range of colours. What is Niobium? Niobium is a soft, ductile transition metal — element 41...
Piercing Sizes Guide: Gauges, Lengths and Diameters
16G, 8mm internally threaded labret with a 4mm flat back disc." If that sentence reads like a foreign language, you are not alone. This guide gives you everything you need to read a specification correctly and order with confidence. Quick Answer Piercing jewellery sizes have three measurements that matter: gauge (the bar thickness, usually in G or mm), length (for straight bars and labrets), and inner diameter (for hoops and rings). Standard gauges are 18G (1.0mm), 16G (1.2mm) and 14G (1.6mm). Always match the gauge of your existing piercing. Gauge: The Most Important Measurement Gauge (G) refers to the thickness...
What is PVD Gold Coating? Everything You Need to Know
Open any high-end piercing collection and you will see the same finishes repeated across hundreds of pieces: PVD Gold, PVD Rose Gold, PVD Black. The acronym is everywhere, but the explanation almost never is. Quick Answer PVD stands for Physical Vapour Deposition — a vacuum-chamber process that bonds a thin layer of titanium nitride or zirconium nitride to a titanium base at the molecular level. The result is a hard-wearing, biocompatible coloured finish (typically gold, rose gold or black) that does not chip, peel or wear off the way traditional plating does. How PVD Coating Works Physical Vapour Deposition is...
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