Yes you can, in fact that’s typically what a piercer will do, especially with cartilage piercings. They pierce with a gauge size bigger than the actual jewelry. It allows room for swelling and placing the jewelry.
In respect to this, what size MM is a cartilage piercing?
JEWELRY TYPE
Standard Hoop Inner Diameter | |
---|---|
Ear Cartilage (Helix, Tragus, Lobe, etc.) | 5/16″ (8mm) |
Earhead, Thin Helix (Hole near the edge) | 1/4″ (6-6.5mm) |
Conch | 3/8″-1/2″ (10mm–12mm) |
Nose | 5/16″ (8mm) |
An 18 gauge earring measures approximately 1.0 mm and a 16 gauge earring measures approximately 1.2 mm, for a difference of 0.2 mm.
Keeping this in consideration, what gauge does Claire’s Pierce cartilage with?
Well, I just found out that Claire’s pierces with a 20 gauge and apparently the more common gauge for cartilage is 16.
Can I put a 14G in a 16G piercing?
14g jewelry is larger than 16g jewelry, but you might be able to fit it. Yes, you can stretch you piercing to a 14g just make sure that the jewelry that you’re buying is suitable for a freshly stretching piercing. … It would just irritate the piercing even if it is fully healed.
Is 20G bigger than 16G?
Please refer to the metric conversion chart below.
Gauge | Inches | Millimeters |
---|---|---|
20G | .032″ | 0.81mm |
18G | .040″ | 1.0mm |
16G | .050″ | 1.2mm |
14G | .064″ | 1.6mm |
How do gauge sizes work?
Gauge is abbreviated “g.” Gauge sizes are usually a number followed by “g” or the word “gauge.” … “Here [in the U.S.] it’s measured by gauge.” Gauge sizes work in reverse, meaning that the higher the number, the thinner the width. So higher numbers (like 16 gauge) are thinner than smaller numbers (like a 6 gauge).