How to Sleep With a New Piercing
Sleep is one of the most underestimated factors in piercing healing and sleeping on a fresh piercing is one of the most common causes of irritation bumps, extended healing, and failed cartilage piercings. You spend roughly eight hours of every day in bed. If a fraction of that involves direct pressure on your healing piercing, the cumulative damage is significant. The good news: with the right pillow and a few simple habits, you can protect even the most awkwardly placed piercing through a full night's sleep. Quick Answer Use a travel pillow (donut or horseshoe shaped) to keep a healing...
Piercing Rejection: Signs, Causes and How to Prevent It
Piercing rejection when the body gradually pushes the jewellery toward the surface and eventually out of the skin — is one of the more disheartening things that can happen to a piercing you love. The good news: it rarely happens suddenly. There are early signs, and catching them early gives you options. Quick Answer Piercing rejection occurs when the body treats the jewellery as a foreign body and pushes it toward the skin surface. Early signs: the piercing appears to be moving, the skin over the jewellery becomes thin and transparent, the jewellery bar seems to be getting shorter. Common...
When Can I Change My Piercing? The Complete Guide
Changing your jewellery too soon is the single most common cause of piercing complications. A piercing that feels perfectly comfortable no tenderness, no discharge, no reaction can still be unhealed internally. The external skin closes faster than the internal channel, and it is the channel that needs to be fully lined before a jewellery change is safe. Quick Answer The minimum time before changing piercing jewellery: earlobes 3 months, cartilage piercings (helix, flat, tragus, conch, daith) 6 months minimum, rook/industrial/snug 9 months, navel and nipple 9–12 months, tongue and lip 3 months. Always get confirmation from your piercer before changing...
Infected Piercing: Signs, Treatment and When to See a Doctor
Piercing infection is far less common than most people fear and irritation is far more common than most people realise. The two look similar at a glance, but they behave differently, require different responses, and carry very different levels of concern. Learning to distinguish them is one of the most important aftercare skills you can develop. Quick Answer Signs of a genuine piercing infection include: thick yellow or green pus (not clear discharge), increasing pain after the first week, warmth and redness spreading outward from the piercing, and fever or swollen lymph nodes. These require medical attention. Normal healing involves...
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