Daith piercing
Daith piercing | |
Nicknames | |
Location | |
Jewelry | Captive bead ring |
Healing time |
A daith piercing is a perforation of the ear cartilage for the purpose of inserting and wearing a piece of jewelry. The daith is primarily placed on the outer rim of the ear cartilage closest to the head. A variation often mistaken for the daith, known as the inner daith, forward helix, or inner helix, is placed in the horizontally-oriented piece of cartilage directly above the ear canal.
The piercing is often performed with either a curved needle to avoid damaging the other parts of the ear, or by using a receiving tube, a hollow length of steel used to catch the needle when there is little or no room for a cork (a method invented by Jim Ward). A small-gauge jewelry is usually inserted, as this part of the ear is difficult to stretch.
The jewelry most commonly worn in a daith piercing is a captive bead ring, though several other types of body jewelry are suitable.
Articles related to Piercings | |
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Piercing methods | Contemporary piercing procedures • Body piercing materials • Stretching • Play piercing • Pocketing • Surface piercing |
Ear piercings | Tragus • Antitragus • Snug • Daith • Conch • Helix • Rook • Industrial |
Facial and oral piercings | Cheek • Eyebrow • Anti-eyebrow • Lip (Labret) • Lip plate • Lip frenulum • Monroe • Medusa) • Nose (Bridge) • Tongue (Tongue frenulum) • Uvula |
Body piercings | Corset • Hand web • Madison • Navel • Nipple • Nape |
Female genital piercings | Christina • Clitoris • Clitoral hood • Triangle • Fourchette • Isabella • Labia • Nefertiti • Princess Albertina |
Male genital piercings | Ampallang • Apadravya • Hafada • Foreskin • Deep shaft • Dolphin • Dydoe • Frenum • Frenum ladder • Guiche • Lorum • Magic Cross • Prince Albert • Reverse Prince Albert • Pubic • Transscrotal |
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