Nose Rings

What Happens if I Take My Nose Ring out Before It's Healed?

While the outside of a new nostril piercing may stay open for several days without jewelry, the inside can close within hours, particularly if the nostril is swollen or inflamed. Nostril piercings go through mucus membranes, which close fast even in healed piercings. If you remove a nose ring you've had for less than six months, it will often heal without a scar.

All About Nose Rings

What to Do When a Nose Ring Falls Out

Having a nose ring fall out is a fairly common problem associated with that type of body jewelry. Depending on the type of nose ring you have, it can be fairly easy for the ring to unclasp, bend or twist its way out of the hole...

What Are the Dangers of Nose Rings?

Nose rings aren't just edgy fashion accessories for the Western world. Based on the healing science Ayurveda, Indian women wear them in the left nostril to aid in childbirth and ease menstrual pain, according to Painful Pleasur...

How Long Before a Nose Ring Hole Closes?

Cartilage piercings take significantly longer to heal than those that go through a flap of skin, like an earlobe. If you remove a ring from a nostril piercing that is less than 6 months old, the hole closes within a matter of d...

How to Put in a Corkscrew Nose Ring

Corkscrew nose rings are small studs that fit flush up against the side of your nose. The post of the stud is twisted, resembling a corkscrew, and keeps the jewelry from slipping out of the nostril hole. Inserting a new corkscr...

How Long Should I Wait to Change My Nose Ring?

When you have a freshly pierced nose, you need to wait an appropriate length of time before changing the ring. Nasal piercings are delicate and can close quickly if they're not completely healed when you remove the original jew...

Do You Take a Nose Ring Out at Night?

You do not have to take a nose ring out at night, and until the piercing is healed, you should now remove the ring or stud at all. Any good piercer will discuss proper care with you and provide you with detailed instructions fo...

Do Nose Rings Scar?

Nose rings have been worn for thousands of years, particularly in India where the nose piercing has cultural significance. Nose rings are still common and popular today but this type of piercing, as with any piercing, carries t...

Nose Ring Instructions

If you have had your nostril piercing for at least six months, you can insert a new ring. The rings most commonly worn in nostrils are called captive bead rings. These are C-shaped rings that use pressure to hold an indented ba...

What Is the Difference Between Nose Ring Gauges?

The word "gauge" refers to the thickness of a piece of jewelry. Nostril piercings are commonly performed with 18 gauge needles, though 20 gauge may be used as well. Bent studs called nostril screws are sold in both sizes. These...

How Long Can I Leave My Nose Ring Out?

While the outside hole can stay open for months without jewelry, the inside hole closes very quickly. Any piercing that goes through a mucous membrane, like those inside the nose and mouth, can seal shut within a couple of days...

Can You Take Out a Nose Ring After 4 Weeks?

A nostril piercing goes through a thick piece of cartilage, which takes longer to heal than a flap of skin like an earlobe. Nostril piercings can heal in as little as three months, but often take up to six months. Because the n...

What Size Are Nose Rings?

The most common gauge, or thickness, for nostril jewelry is 18, though 20-gauge or 16-gauge may also be used. The higher the number, the smaller the gauge. For example, a 20-gauge is the thinnest and a 16-gauge is the thickest....

How to Take Out a Nose Ring With a Ball

Nose rings with a ball are also known as captive bead nose rings. This type of jewelry features an O-shaped metal ring with a spherical bead. The bead hides the breach, or gap, in the nose ring. To remove the nose ring, you mus...

What Is an 18-Gauge Nose Ring?

The term "gauge" refers to the thickness of a piece of jewelry. All piercings have common gauges at which they are usually performed. A piercing on the face is generally a smaller gauge, while piercings on the body are thicker....

How Do I Take Care of a Nose Ring?

Piercings in the nose can be placed through the cartilage of the nostril or just below the cartilage of the septum. Because a septum piercing does not actually penetrate cartilage, it has a shorter healing time than a nostril p...

The Healing Process of a Nose Ring

Nose piercing isn't something new. Nostril piercings are common in traditional New Guinea and African societies, according to the Children, Youth and Women's Health Service of South Australia. Before you step into the piercing ...

Nose Ring Bone Vs. Nose Screw

There are several jewelry options for nose piercings, including rings, nose bones and screws. Rings are the most obvious choice, and many people may want a more subtle stud rather than the classic ring. Nose screws and bones pr...

How to Get Rid of a Nose Ring Scar

Like any other injury to the skin, piercings can lead to scarring. Your body is just trying to repair the puncture wound by increasing the production of connective tissue. With nose piercings, the healing process can eventually...

How to Get a Nose Ring

Body piercings can be traced back to ancient Egyptian, Greek and Roman civilizations and remain a popular practice today. Getting your nose pierced, as with any other body modification, is a major decision that should not be ta...

How to Remove a C-Shaped Nose Ring

A C-shaped nostril ring is called a nostril screw. On the inside of your nostril piercing, your nose ring curves into a C-shape. The curve makes your jewelry stay inside your nose, preventing loss of your jewelry. Your first at...

How to Insert a Corkscrew Nose Ring

Nostril screws are bent from fishtails, which look like blunt-ended straight pins. When you get your nostril pierced, the piercer holds the jewelry just under your nostril to measure the thickness. He grips that length of th...

How To Remove a Nose Ring

A captive bead ring is C-shaped and holds an indented bead in place between its prongs. The bead is held in place by pressure. If your nostril piercing has had at least six months to heal, preferably 12, you can safely remove ...

How To Insert a Nose Ring Captive Ball

Captive rings are C-shaped and hold a bead in place with pressure between the two ends. The most common gauges for nostril piercings are 16 and 18, with a ring diameter between 1/4-inch and 7/16-inch, depending on the size of t...

Nose Ring Cleaning Tips

Keeping your nose ring clean is a crucial step in avoiding infections, especially if the piercing is fresh. Nasal piercings take anywhere from two to four months to heal completely, and they are quite susceptible to problems du...

How to Wear a Nose Ring

The ring most commonly worn in the nose is called a captive bead ring. This C-shaped ring has an opening to hold a bead in place using pressure. The most common gauge for a nostril piercing is 18, and common diameters of rings ...

How to Change a Screw Nose Ring

When your piercer pierces your nostril, she bends the fishtail into a custom nostril screw to fit the thickness of your cartilage. Several centimeters behind the bead are left straight, then the fishtail is crimped at a 90-de...

How to Take a Nose Ring Out After Healing

When your piercing is fully healed, you can change your jewelry or remove it briefly. Because the hole inside the nostril can close quickly, jewelry should not be left out for more than a day or two. The most common jewelry ite...

How to Remove a Nose Ring Stud With a Half Circle

The studs most frequently inserted into nostril piercings have no backs, like traditional stud earrings. Nose ring studs are called nostril screws. A nostril screw starts out as a fishtail, which looks like a straight pin wit...

How to Put in a Curved Nose Ring

A curved nose ring, also known as a nose screw, comes in several different gauges and materials. While 16- and 18-gauge (diameter) is most common, thinner gauges are available. Curved nose rings, often adorned with a stud at on...

How To Insert a Nose Ring Indent Ball

A nose ring indent ball is more commonly called a captive bead ring. This is a ring that holds a bead "captive" between two prongs. The bead is indented on the top and bottom, which allows it to snap into place. If your nostril...

How To Insert a Screw Nose Ring

Today, nose piercings are worn as a fashion accessory and a common type of nose jewelry is the nostril screw, or screw-base nose ring. The nostril screw has the ball or gem on one end and a tiny corkscrew shape on the end that ...

How to Take Out a Twisted Nose Ring

A nostril screw starts out as a fishtail, which looks like a straight pin with a blunt end. The piercer twists the end of the fishtail into a U-shape that sits inside the nose and holds the jewelry in place. To remove a nost...

How to Remove a Nose Ring Stud

People have worn nose rings for centuries. Types of jewelry worn in nose piercings include rings, studs and screws. However, it is sometimes necessary to take out the jewelry. You can usually remove the nose jewelry by yourself...

How to Take Out a Nose Ring Screw

Some screws come pre-bent, while others are bent by the piercer to fit the width of the client's nostril. A properly performed piercing goes straight through the nostril toward the septum rather than at an angle toward the open...

How to Insert a Nose Ring

The term "nose ring" refers to two kinds of jewelry--a captive bead ring and a nostril screw. Both are commonly used in initial nostril piercings. A captive bead ring holds a bead between the two ends of the ring with pressure,...

How To Insert a Nose Ring Ball

Professional piercers use a hollow needle to create the hole needed for a nose piercing. A nose ring ball, also called a nose stud or nose bone, has a tiny ball on one end and a larger, more decorative ball on the other. The ti...

How to Replace Nose Rings

If you've had your nose ring, or nostril piercing, for at least six months, you may be ready to change your jewelry. Most piercers perform nostril piercings with either a captive bead ring (CBR) or nostril screw. A captive bead...

How to Put in a Hoop Nose Ring

The septum, or the fleshy piece of cartilage that separates your nostrils, is typically pierced with a hoop or horseshoe piercing. Nostril jewelry, however, varies in size, type and decoration. Nose studs, rings, horsehoes, bon...

How to Insert a Spiral Nose Ring

A starter stud fills the hole and remains in place until the piercing site heals. Once healed, many people choose to swap-out the starter stud for another piece of jewelry. Studs, L-shapes and spiral (corkscrew) nose rings ...

What Is the Bump Next to My Nose Ring?

Healing is relatively easy, if sometimes slow--about three to four months on average. But every piercing can develop complications at any time during the healing process, even if well-cared for. If you have a bump near the site...

How to Change a Nose Ring After Piercing

Nose piercing has been around for over 4,000 years. The Bible mentions nose piercing in the book of Genesis 24:22 where Abraham gives Rebekah a gold nose ring and two gold bracelets. Since the sixteenth century, nose piercing h...

How to Get Rid of a Bump on Your Nose Ring

Bumps are common occurrences on nose piercings because they are easily bumped, and cartilage also takes longer to heal than the fleshy areas of the body such as the ear lobes. They often appear as red bumps right beside the pie...

Nose Rings Information

In Indian culture, where nose rings are very common, there is believed to be a connection between the nose and the sexual reflexes, according to cultural website Exotic India. For people in western countries, however, nose ring...

How to Clean Nose Rings

A nose ring is a popular form of body piercing. It makes a subtle statement about the wearer’s nonconformity, without creating an image that is too brash or offensive. Nose rings, like all piercings, require a lot of care...

Hazards of Nose Piercings

Nose piercings and jewelry come with hazards and risks during the healing period and after. If you care for your nostril piercing while following the advice of a professional piercer, you can avoid potential problems. Nostril p...

How to Change Nose Rings

Nose piercings are a popular form of body ornamentation. The jewelry people wear in these piercings includes captive bead rings and nostril screws. Don't attempt to change nose rings until your nose piercing has healed, which c...

Nose Rings & Keloids

Any time the skin is torn, there is the potential for scarring and other damage. A nose piercing is a significant "tear," going fully through a thick piece of skin, whether it's a nostril piercing or one through the septum. Whi...

10 Reasons to Get a Nose Ring

There are two types of nose piercings: the nostril, on the side, and the septum, through the center. Nostril piercings are very popular, perhaps second only to the ear as a site for body jewelry. Septum piercings are less commo...

Types of Nose Ring

Stainless steel, titanium, gold and niobium are metal options for various types of nose-ring jewelry. Bioplast is a flexible alternative to metal that may be more compatible with your body. Silver is only an option for healed p...

About Nose Piercings

According to the author of "The Piercing Bible," nose piercing dates to at least 1500 B.C. The ancient sacred texts of Hinduism describe a goddess with a pierced nose. Nose piercing is common in Indian cultures and has more rec...

Types of Nose Rings

Any type of jewelry worn in the nose is referred to a nose ring, even studs which are not in the shape of a ring at all. Nose rings are made from a variety of metals including nickel, stainless steel, white and yellow gold and ...