For the most part, this is a complementary piercing, and most men who are into body piercing find this attractive on a woman, but that is not to say that all women who get this piercing are really suited for it. My best advice would be to go to your preferred tattoo shop and ask the piercer if he or she thinks that you are capable of pulling off that particular piercing. Generally, an honest question deserves an honest answer, so the piercer on staff will let you know.
So far as I know, there is no natural way to do it, though plastic surgery could - but why would you want to? The are almost always considered an attractive feature.
It is neither good or bad to have dimples. Some find dimples to be attractive while others do not feel one way or another about them. There is a good chance that if a baby has dimples, they will outgrow them as they get older.
Dimples are mostly located on the cheeks. They are common genetic trait. Most are caused by a birth defect, which just goes to show that not all "malformations" are actually bad. In fact, in many cultures, dimpled cheeks are considered attractive.
This would depend on whether the allele for dimples is dominant or recessive. If the allele for dimples is dominant and the no dimples allele is recessive then the phenotype of the individual would be dimpled. If the allele for no dimples is dominant and the allele for no dimples is recessive then the dimples will not be expressed. If these alleles are codominant then the dimples will be expressed but not as much as in an individual who has both alleles for dimples.
Peircings, tatoos, funnyness, vegetarianism, wealthy, dimples, nerdyness, a big penis, abs, medium sized dingle berries
This would depend on whether the allele for dimples is dominant or recessive. If the allele for dimples is dominant and the no dimples allele is recessive then the phenotype of the individual would be dimpled. If the allele for no dimples is dominant and the allele for no dimples is recessive then the dimples will not be expressed. If these alleles are codominant then the dimples will be expressed but not as much as in an individual who has both alleles for dimples.
Dimples Cooper went by Dimples.
You can't really MAKE dimples. Dimples are completely genetic.
This would depend on whether the allele for dimples is dominant or recessive. If the allele for dimples is dominant and the no dimples allele is recessive then the phenotype of the individual would be dimpled. If the allele for no dimples is dominant and the allele for no dimples is recessive then the dimples will not be expressed. If these alleles are codominant then the dimples will be expressed but not as much as in an individual who has both alleles for dimples.
A dimple is a dominant trait. If a father has two dominant dimple genes (DD) and the mother has two recessive dimple genes (dd), the baby's dimple alleles will be Dd, meaning he will have dimples.
Dimples are a dominant trait.
Simple. Dimples.