Piercings Prices
Includes tax and basic surgical steel jewelry
Basic $30 2 for $50
Includes both ear lobes, cartilage, nostril, labret(center), navel, and brow/anti
$35 Piercings
Rook
Snug(Anti-helix)
Tragus/Anti
Daith
Conch
Bridge
Smiley/Frowney
Vertical or Side Labret
Nipple
$40 Piercings
Industrial
Monroe
Medusa
Tongue
Lingual Frenulum (web)
Septum
Surface Piercings $60
Micro Dermals $70
Piercing Care
The number one cause of all piercing infections is caused by touching your new piercing with dirty hands!
Sea Salt Soaks
1. Wash your hands thoroughly with liquid antibacterial or antimicrobial soap.
2. Place a pinch of sea salt in the bottom of a small disposable cup. About 1/8 teaspoon.
3. Add hot tap water - as hot as you can stand - to the salt.
4. Invert the cup right over the piercing and soak for 5 minutes. This usually works well for nipple and navel piercings. If you can't create a sufficient seal against the skin with the cup, then soak a cotton ball in the salt water solution and apply the cotton ball to the piercing. When it cools down, throw it away and place a newly saturated cotton ball on the piercing. Do this for 5 minutes.
5. Rinse the piercing with warm water and dry with a clean paper towel.
6. Continue to soak until piercing is healed.
7. Use clean bedding and change clothing daily while piercing is healing.
8. DON'T turn or twist jewelry.
9. DON'T use oils, Peroxide, or Alcohol.
10. DON'T get hairspray or cosmetics on piercing while it is healing.
Soaking Tips
Only pure sea salt is to be used. Table salt, kosher salt, epsom salts, and iodized sea salts are not acceptable. Sea salt can be found in many grocery stores and almost all health food stores.
*If you are not sure about the solution strength, put a dab on your finger and taste it with the tip of your tongue. It should be no saltier than a potato chip.*
To aid in healing a new piercing, sea salt soaks once a day should be sufficient. If your piercing is irritated, increase sea salt soaks to 2-3 times per day until the irritation subsides.
If your piercing becomes irritated as a result of sea salt soaks, you are probably using either the wrong kind of salt or have made your solution too strong.
Report back to the studio if you still have questions.