You mean a website for plugs and tunnels? I'll leave the links for you. I have had the most experience with Body Art Forms and they're awesome. Everyone that I know that uses them also likes them. Pierced Fish is also great too. I haven't bought plugsthere so I cant vouch for quality. Omerica is great for wood stuff and Diablo Organics is good for organics like wood, bone, and horn. Diablo's website is only for wholesale but you can get their stuff at BAF. Glasswear studios is nice for glass pieces, obviously.BAF and Pierced Fish are your best options if you're on a budget :)
www.wildcat.co.uk
The difference is mostly we use spacers for our car wheels but use ear gauges for ear.
chester ear guage is a 7/16.
12mm :)
any age
Solid silicone plugs.
very tacky.....
Not as long as you're responsible enough to clean them and care for them. Also, they aren't gauges, they're just stretched lobes.
They're called plugs, not gauges. You can paint the front or back of them but not the part touching your ear. If you do paint the outsides, you'd have to wear silicone earskins around them so that the paint doesn't touch your ears.
ear guages.. No actually it's actually called expanded ear jewellery (plugs, tunnels) the phrase "ear gauges" is wrong.
yes he appears in a picture with the ear pierced http://img207.imageshack.us/img207/4175hjkln.jpg ^ yes he has his ears pierced, but the aren't gauges, its just the earring's he wears that make it look like he does
Ear gauges can indeed close. I have head several stories about peoples' ear gauges closing over time, some even being near size 00. Ear gauges can close over time if you don't wear a plug or tunnel in it. If the gauge is small, it will take less time for it to close, unlike BIG gauges - which could take around 2 months. One secret is to rub hemerroid cream on your ears about twice a day first your ears will swell but later when your lobes go back to normal the holes will be smaller. However, if your ears were gauged above a 00, they will never close entirely without surgery, which currently runs about $800 an ear.