“I feel like, for a long time, piercing only appealed to a very specific type of crowd—one that was trying to look more intimidating and aggressive, ” says J. Colby Smith, the in-demand practitioner behind the latest earrings and piercings popping up on models and celebrities from New York to Los Angeles. “My goal was to bring it into a light that made it more appealing to a broader number of people.”
Thanks to his nearly 20 years of experience, Smith has managed to do just that. “I knew that if we could just get a delicate piercing on the right person, the rest would catch on like wildfire.” So far, Smith’s trademark approach of carefully curated pixie studs and subtle chain hoops has attracted the likes of everyone from Emma Stone to Julianne Moore. Whether it’s Zoë Kravitz’s dainty gold septum ring or Scarlett Johansson’s artfully arranged ear hoops, you know a J. Colby Smith original when you see one.

“Every piercing I do is an extension of my client’s style, ” says Smith, who now splits his time between New York and Los Angeles to give his customers a more intimate experience. “They are definitely my biggest source of inspiration.”
This Is The Piercing That Everyone Will Want In 2022
Here, we’ve rounded up some of the best tips and practices in the world of piercing, from one of the most sought-after practitioners in the game.
Placement Is Everything“The ears are a great place to show off new jewelry. Conch piercings, daith piercings, helix piercings—really anything in doubles is really hot right now. Nipple piercings have also become a huge one, along with septums. Septums are great because if you’re an actress or model, it’s very easy to take it off or hide it. It gives you a little bit of an edge with the ability to slip out of it from time to time.”
When It Comes to Piercings, Be Your Own Inspiration“Be open. Sometimes it might not be exactly what you were thinking. Say you’ve been looking at some actress’s piercings and you want your ear piercings to look exactly like hers. But you have to remember that her ear and your ear might be totally different.”

A Guide To Ear Mapping, Jewellery's Latest Trend
Don’t Let Your Fear of Piercings Get the Best of You“I think a lot of people come into piercing with fear and anxiety, which is normal. But it’s also kind of the fun part of it all—like a roller coaster. Surrendering to the experience is really big. And if you can do that, you’ll actually find something really beautiful in it. The experience is everything.”
No Pain, No Gain“Women do much better than men with this type of pain. It’s very minimal and quick, but it is different for everybody. Nipple piercings are probably as bad as it gets, like a 5 or 6 on a scale of 1 to 10. Earlobes tend to hurt more than cartilage.”

Caring for Your New Piercing Is a Must“After a piercing, I try to keep it really simple by recommending people just use soap and water. I like a Castile soap like Dr. Bronner’s because it has oil to help moisturize the skin. Sometimes dryness can be a real issue during the healing process. More than cleaning it or anything else, it’s usually sleeping on it that causes the biggest problems. So when something’s new, irritated, and your body already hates it, putting additional pressure while you sleep can really drive it crazy. It can often lead people to think that it’s infected, but most of the time that’s not the case.”Whether it is the punk subversion of Vivienne Westwood or the post-apocalyptic aesthetics of Balenciaga, fashion has explored subcultures by absorbing their stylistic codes, sometimes emptied of their original message of subversion, sometimes exploited as an ideological manifesto precisely because of their symbolic meaning. And if there is one sign that still today denotes belonging to a subculture, be it emo, punk or gabber, it is the piercing, the absolute star of Jean Paul Gaultier's latest fashion show designed by Olivier Rousteing during Paris Fashion Week, in which huge nostrils evoked the enfant terrible's iconic SS94 tribal catwalk. Septum, nostril, labret, smiley, cheek: there are so many of them and they can cover the most disparate parts of the body. In fashion, they not only adorn the ephebic faces of models, but can also become an applique on sweatshirts, sweaters, bags and hats, giving garments that post-grunge allure that designers of the calibre of Demna Gvasalia, Riccardo Tisci, John Galliano, Thom Browne, Alessandro Michele, Jonny Johansson, Martin Margielalike so much.
Remarkable Ear Piercing Ideas That Are Trending
From the English to pierce, piercing, long before becoming a symbol of subversion, was an emblem of belonging and differentiation: peculiar to African tribes with the purpose of distinguishing the roles assumed by various individuals in daily life and in ceremonies, as well as a widespread practice in religious and spiritual, sexual and erotic contexts, and not just for simple tradition. Some communities used to pierce their genitals as a symbol of fertility, but also to increase sexual pleasure, others to protect themselves from demons and evil spirits, and still others to designate the passage from childhood to adulthood in young men. During the slave trade, women would try to pierce as many parts of their bodies as possible, even lobes and lips to throw off the 'buyers' who used to choose them for their beauty. For sailors, on the other hand, it was common to wear gold piercings: it was believed that the jewellery would bring the body back to the surface in the event of shipwreck and at the same time serve to pay off any funeral expenses in the event of sudden death. To this day, piercings are still used for religious purposes in some parts of the world, while in Western culture, the jewel has lost its ritual value, remaining a functional tool for bdsm practices or a simple accessory, as much loved as hated.

Alongside fashion's obsession with tattoos, piercings certainly occupy a prominent place. The fashion industry's love for the accessory reached its peak at Alexander McQueen's autumn 2016 men's fashion show in London, where models walked down the runway with safety pins stuck in their cheeks. A fan of this type of body modification is Riccardo Tisci, who explored the aesthetics of nostrils as early as 2012, while in autumn 2015 with Givenchy, piercings multiplied exponentially, culminating in a collaboration with make-up artist Pat McGrath in a tribal look composed of pearls, lace and jewels in spring 2016 in New York.Chanel for SS12 chose to create a branded version, as did Gucci last season.
While much of the fashion industry turns to professionals such as J. Colby Smith, Kate and Laura Mulleavy adorned the models' eyebrows with rows of small hoop earrings for Rodarte's spring 2015 fashion show and Dries Van Noten presented his beauty look in Paris with fake piercings: a golden metal line traced in the centre of the lower lip to simulate a vertical labret. Among the designers who have preferred to re-position piercings from faces to garments instead, an honourable mention goes to Marni by Francesco Risso, an endless source of moccasins, mary janes, boots and from the last collection even silk shirts covered with thin rings, similarly Balenciaga has often used piercings such as the septum or nostril to decorate baseball caps and shirts. With the Y2K revival, on the other hand, fashion has rediscovered Galliano's Piercing bags for Dior, which today at retail have seen their original price double, a symbol of a time when the French brand had a dark and hardcore allure and the classic saddle bag covered in chains and metal seemed the perfect accessory for a metal concert.Multiple piercings make a strong fashion statement, and are less of a commitment than getting inked. But do you know your antitragus from your conch?

Are Body Piercings Deluding Fashion Trends?
C onch, rook, helix, daith: these words won’t mean anything to most people, but to an army of voguish women, they are immediately recognisable as the parts of the ear that can be pierced. Look around boutique gyms, co-working spaces for the creative industries and stylish bars, and you will see women – mostly in their 20s and 30s – with intricately pierced ears.
They may have four gold hoops hanging in a single lobe, diamond bars “stacked” along their cartilage, or a skull-shaped stud glimmering from their antitragus. They’re all fans of the “curated ear” – a craze for multiple ear piercings, in unusual placements – that has arguably replaced tattoos as the body adornment du jour. Although some men are also getting in on the act, this particular piercings trend is predominately led by young women, although reliable data on the subject is hard to come by. A 2008 study found that nearly half of women in England aged 16-24 had piercings at sites other than the earlobe (this included sites elsewhere on the body). By comparison, a 2015 British study found that 30% of 25- to 39-year-olds have at least one tattoo. According to the US piercing studio Infinite Body Piercing, the

From the English to pierce, piercing, long before becoming a symbol of subversion, was an emblem of belonging and differentiation: peculiar to African tribes with the purpose of distinguishing the roles assumed by various individuals in daily life and in ceremonies, as well as a widespread practice in religious and spiritual, sexual and erotic contexts, and not just for simple tradition. Some communities used to pierce their genitals as a symbol of fertility, but also to increase sexual pleasure, others to protect themselves from demons and evil spirits, and still others to designate the passage from childhood to adulthood in young men. During the slave trade, women would try to pierce as many parts of their bodies as possible, even lobes and lips to throw off the 'buyers' who used to choose them for their beauty. For sailors, on the other hand, it was common to wear gold piercings: it was believed that the jewellery would bring the body back to the surface in the event of shipwreck and at the same time serve to pay off any funeral expenses in the event of sudden death. To this day, piercings are still used for religious purposes in some parts of the world, while in Western culture, the jewel has lost its ritual value, remaining a functional tool for bdsm practices or a simple accessory, as much loved as hated.

Alongside fashion's obsession with tattoos, piercings certainly occupy a prominent place. The fashion industry's love for the accessory reached its peak at Alexander McQueen's autumn 2016 men's fashion show in London, where models walked down the runway with safety pins stuck in their cheeks. A fan of this type of body modification is Riccardo Tisci, who explored the aesthetics of nostrils as early as 2012, while in autumn 2015 with Givenchy, piercings multiplied exponentially, culminating in a collaboration with make-up artist Pat McGrath in a tribal look composed of pearls, lace and jewels in spring 2016 in New York.Chanel for SS12 chose to create a branded version, as did Gucci last season.
While much of the fashion industry turns to professionals such as J. Colby Smith, Kate and Laura Mulleavy adorned the models' eyebrows with rows of small hoop earrings for Rodarte's spring 2015 fashion show and Dries Van Noten presented his beauty look in Paris with fake piercings: a golden metal line traced in the centre of the lower lip to simulate a vertical labret. Among the designers who have preferred to re-position piercings from faces to garments instead, an honourable mention goes to Marni by Francesco Risso, an endless source of moccasins, mary janes, boots and from the last collection even silk shirts covered with thin rings, similarly Balenciaga has often used piercings such as the septum or nostril to decorate baseball caps and shirts. With the Y2K revival, on the other hand, fashion has rediscovered Galliano's Piercing bags for Dior, which today at retail have seen their original price double, a symbol of a time when the French brand had a dark and hardcore allure and the classic saddle bag covered in chains and metal seemed the perfect accessory for a metal concert.Multiple piercings make a strong fashion statement, and are less of a commitment than getting inked. But do you know your antitragus from your conch?

Are Body Piercings Deluding Fashion Trends?
C onch, rook, helix, daith: these words won’t mean anything to most people, but to an army of voguish women, they are immediately recognisable as the parts of the ear that can be pierced. Look around boutique gyms, co-working spaces for the creative industries and stylish bars, and you will see women – mostly in their 20s and 30s – with intricately pierced ears.
They may have four gold hoops hanging in a single lobe, diamond bars “stacked” along their cartilage, or a skull-shaped stud glimmering from their antitragus. They’re all fans of the “curated ear” – a craze for multiple ear piercings, in unusual placements – that has arguably replaced tattoos as the body adornment du jour. Although some men are also getting in on the act, this particular piercings trend is predominately led by young women, although reliable data on the subject is hard to come by. A 2008 study found that nearly half of women in England aged 16-24 had piercings at sites other than the earlobe (this included sites elsewhere on the body). By comparison, a 2015 British study found that 30% of 25- to 39-year-olds have at least one tattoo. According to the US piercing studio Infinite Body Piercing, the

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