It is recommended that you wait at least a few weeks but you can. Indoor tanning you would have to wait longer. Just be careful is you are putting SPF or lotion on. If it gets into the piercing it could get infected and that is VERY painful.
If it hangs or dangles chances are good that it will retain a piercing. Placing the navel piercing off to the side will be problematic for aftercare and irritation during the healing process. If you haven't had a navel piercing before then stay with something that is simpler to care for and will give a result a navel piercing is supposed to give.
Rendess will come and go through the healing process whit a navel piercing, any time the piercing is covered or subjected to irritation from clothing there will be redness. It doesn't mean that there's an issue just that it's a piercing that is irritated, so floppy shirts, loose clothing aroung the piercing and as much fresh air as possible during the healing process will minimize the redness you will encounter.
It's the process if healing. If you clean with sea salt (which you're suppose to) it's just drying it out. Nothing to worry about.
As you would without a navel piercing, just be sure the navel piercing is the last thing you clean before you exit the bath.
Your question "Can navel piercing migration be down to growth" makes no sense.
She can still keep her navel piercing in.
Navel piercing could cost anywhere between Rs 350 and 500 with navel jewelery done by experienced piercer.
If you want to wear a regular navel ring in your inverse piercing, turn the navel ring upside-down, so that the larger gem is in the navel, and the smaller gem is below.
They don't. Navel piercings tend to be pretty low on the pain scale though. The soreness that comes with healing will most likely be more bothersome than the actual piercing.
it is a plastic piece you put in to retain your navel piercing
There's no relation between menstrual cycle and navel piercings, however there are important issues regarding age. Even if the local laws are more lax, it is not appropriate to have a navel piercing if you are under 16 years of age, as the body is still developing. A piercing that looks aesthetic if done when you are too young, can end up in the wrong spot by the time you are fully grown. Also, navel piercings take 6-9 months to heal! So they take a lot of patience and maturity to deal with and care for during that time. For example, you can't go swimming at the beach while you're healing (unless you cover your piercing with a waterproof bandage). Contrary to the above there is a correlation between the cycles and the healing of a navel piercing. More often than not about 2~ 4 days before the cycle arrives the piercing can become annoyed and some what cranky, discharging a bit more than normal. This is often mistaken as an infection and treated with various products all of which just annoy the piercing even more so. Simple irrigation of the piercing while moving the jewellery under warm running water in the shower eases this discomfort and once the cycle starts the piercing reverts to a more normal behaviour. The actual healing time for a navel piercing to be considered seasoned is a full year. These statements are based on over 18 years of hands on experience in the body piercing field.
No connection whatsoever.