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Point #71: Environmental Criteria Update

Dear APP Members,

The Association of Professional Piercers Membership Committee and Board of Directors thanks you for being a part of our organization. In response to overwhelming demand from our members, we have made significant strides in updating our membership requirements. To ensure all of our members are operating at the current minimum standards, we are requiring that all current members who have a video walk through and environmental criteria older than two years provide an updated video walk through and submit updated environmental criteria. If you are receiving this letter, your video walk through and environmental criteria are older than two years as of December 31, 2015.

These updates should be submitted no later than January 1st, 2016. There will be no video processing fee with digital or hard copy submissions.

You can upload all your completed forms, signed pages, photos of your autoclave(s), scans or photos of your documentation, and everything else to Google Drive as a single Google document or PDF (Google Drive is the preferred method). Upload the video to YouTube (www. youtube.com/upload), set to unlisted, and Creative Commons license. (Go to info and settings, then choose advanced settings, then Creative Commons license.) Next, copy the link to your video, paste it into the document you created, then share the completed application with media@safepiercing.org or email.

Pre-Application Processing Checklist:

  • Application Form
  • Copy of current CPR certificate
  • Copy of current First Aid certificate
  • Copy of current Bloodborne Pathogens training certificate
  • A narrated unedited 360 degree video of your shop
  • Photograph of all autoclaves with Make, Model, and Serial Number
  • Copy of two most recent spore tests from each autoclave
  • Copies of piercing aftercare sheets
  • Copy of Business License
  • Copy of shop/personal business card
  • An example of advertising
  • Copy of certificate of Liability Insurance (if applicable)
  • Copy of jewelry invoices from last 90 days

Pre-submission video checklist:
Pre-Video Checklist

  • Show the front of shop
  • Show the back of the shop too.
  • Required: Videos must be shot in LANDSCAPE view, not portrait.
  • Required: No cuts or editing in the video
  • Go through every drawer and closet in the shop.
  • Tattoo stations may be omitted.

Front Counter

  • A non-porous front counter that can be disinfected
  • Disinfectant products behind counter
  • Gloves behind counter
  • Bags or cups for contaminated customer jewelry
  • Suggested: signage asking clients not to touch jewelry
  • Suggested: a thoroughly organized, neat counter and desk area

Sterilization Room

  • Non-porous flooring
  • Clear separation between dirty and clean
  • An ultrasonic or instrument washer for piercing tools
  • An employees only sign
  • Does your autoclave meet requirements?
  • Is your clean up room totally contained?
  • “No handwashing in dirty room” sign
  • Suggested: A clean jewelry ultrasonic or steam cleaner or both
  • Suggested: HEPA filter

Hand washing Area

  • Is it in the studio, or a separate employee handwashing area? (bathrooms and sterilization room sinks are not acceptable)
  • Hands free paper towels (single hand)
  • Suggested: hands free faucet (infrared or foot pedal)
  • Suggested: hands free soap (infrared)

Piercing Room

  • Sharps Container wall mount and placed correctly
  • A Biohazard tool tray
  • Lidded trash cans, foot operated or infrared
  • Is your piercing studio private, with minimum 8 foot walls?
  • Do you have an appropriate (non-porous, massage/dental/ medical style) piercing table
  • Is your artwork framed, nonporous and easily disinfectable?
  • Is your storage sealed, disinfectable and appropriate?
  • Suggested: HEPA filter
  • Suggested: Sterile Gloves for piercing procedures

Bathroom

  • Is the bathroom clean, with an operational toilet and sink?
  • Are there appropriate handwashing products in the bathroom?
  • There must be no piercing related items in bathroom storage.
  • Suggested: A sign that asks clients not to touch or change their jewelry in the bathroom.

The Membership Committee is available to anyone who needs any assistance in any way, shape or form. Please do not hesitate to contact us with any questions (members@safepiercing.org).
THE APP OFFICERS & BOARD OF DIRECTORS:
• Brian Skellie—President
• Cody Vaughn—Vice President
• Paul King—Treasurer
• Bethrah Szumski—Secretary
• Jef Saunders—Membership Liaison
• Steve Joyner—Legislation Liaison
• Christopher Glunt—Medical Liaison
• Ash Misako—Outreach Coordinator
• Miro Hernandez—Public Relations

Point #71: Service – Caitlin McDiarmid

CaitlinMcDiarmid

Caitlin McDiarmid
APP Administrator

“I slept and dreamt that life was joy. I awoke and saw that life was service. I acted and behold, service was joy.” — Rabindranath Tagore

One of the greatest gifts given to me over the last 13 years has been the gift of mentoring. There’s something about having a grown man or woman, someone who isn’t your own child or student, tell you that you were instrumental in them learning, growing, changing, or reaching a new goal. I wasn’t good at it when I started with the APP. I was more than bad at it. But I continued just the same, tried to learn from my own mentor, Paul King; and tried to work on myself. I’m still not perfect, but the work and success of the volunteers continues to reflect my efforts back to me.

In 2007, at an emotionally laden Banquet Dinner, I talked about the transformative power of service. Back then I didn’t write down my speeches in advance so those exact words are lost. I know I spoke too long – we all did that year. But I wanted to try and get across to the audience – to our Attendees – the joys of service. The APP after all relies on volunteers from the top down.

Our Board Members are volunteers; our committee members are volunteers; our conference workers are volunteers (some minimally compensated). There are few of us who are compensated for certain jobs, but generally go far above the call of duty and are still volunteers for the Association.

From approximately 20 conference volunteers in 2003 (that includes the Board who worked the merch booth and classroom doors that year) to approximately 70 in 2015. As the Conference has grown our team dynamic has developed. As the fun we all were having showed our volunteer group has expanded.

71 - Conference Volunteers

The community of conference volunteers have become more than friends; they have become a family. Through service and working alongside each other we have formed bonds, which means that we send each other letters (real letters!) and cookies in the mail. We reach out to each other when we are going through rough times or experiencing great joys. We share opportunities in the industry – who’s hiring/who’s not. We celebrate when another volunteer becomes a Member and when a new volunteer joins the group. Through service to the organization and the Conference I’ve watched these young women and men grow up, mature, have relationships, change relationships, get jobs, travel, open shops, serve as committee members, and even as Board Members.

Many of the conference volunteers also serve in other capacities for the Association and the event. They often volunteer in their communities as well. Service brings a joy to life that I don’t think can be found elsewhere. This year I am encouraging the most experienced volunteers to start mentoring the newer volunteers. They have earned their place in this process. It is the next step of service work.

I watch every year as a group of volunteers, all decidedly different from one another, interact and work together on a variety of tasks and come out the other side friends and colleagues. It’s a magical process and by the end we are all in tears saying our goodbyes. I’ve watched people from a variety of religious backgrounds, genders, sexual orientations, economic levels, cultures, piercing skill level, anxiety levels, social abilities, and ages – all let things which could have caused barriers become bridges.

I have never had a volunteer walk away from the experience unchanged. Service is transformative. Attending the Conference is transformative. Combine the two and it’s amazing.

We shouldn’t get to have all the fun. While our team has grown over the years, we are always looking for new volunteers. If you can’t volunteer during Conference, think about doing so in your community; whether as a piercer educating students in schools about safe piercing or as a food shelf worker. Do something, get involved for the greater good. Absolutely positively – everyone can make a difference.APP Conference Volunteers 2014

Point #70: The Point Past and Present

THE POINT—PAST & PRESENT

Point-70-From-the-Editor-Kendra-0.jpgKENDRA JANE

The Point—Managing Editor of Content & Archives

If we look hard enough we can find patterns, cycles and trends in everything; music, food, or cars, all trends have a cyclic nature and none more so than fashion. One of the first people to try to rationalize these trends was the fashion historian James Laver. In 1937 he drew up a timeline of how style is viewed over time, which subsequently became known as Laver’s law. Continue reading

Point #70: Christina Shull-Trends in the Industry

TRENDS IN THE INDUSTRY

Christina Shull headshotCHRISTINA SHULL
Integrity Piercing

When Alicia Silverstone starred in Aerosmith’s “Cryin’” video, she was a young woman dealing with heartbreak by running away and getting her navel pierced. Please note that the piercing in the video is staged as her navel had previously been pierced by Paul King. Subsequently women everywhere flocked to their local piercer for an adorable and potentially rebellious navel piercing of their own. While this was the first large-scale body piercing trend inspired by the media, this was only the beginning.

Paul King preparing to pierce Alicia Silverstone’s navel in the Aerosmith video “Cryin’”
Paul King preparing to pierce Alicia Silverstone’s navel in the Aerosmith
video “Cryin’”

Continue reading

Point #70: In the office

IN THE OFFICE

Caitlin McDiarmid headshotCAITLIN MCDIARMID
APP Administrator

I’ve been asked to talk about how the office has changed over the last 20 years; I can only speak to the last 12 years (as I wasn’t part of the APP prior to that time), but there is still quite a lot to talk about.

At the end of 2002, I was informed that the “Body Piercing Association” was looking for clerical and administration help in Albuquerque, NM. It was at that time, I was hired as the “Administrative Assistant” on a part-time basis. My main responsibilities were to disseminate incoming emails and calls to the appropriate parties, fulfill orders that came into the office, mail out The Point Quarterly, and other duties as assigned. I was encouraged to learn the standard responses to common aftercare questions and the ever popular “How do I become a Body Piercer?” It was a pretty tough time for the organization. Money was extremely tight. The Board was very dedicated and paid out of their own pocket for flights, among other things. There were seven Board Members and there were no committees or other members contributing time to the work of the organization. I spent a lot of time setting up new systems for the organization of digital and physical files and learning how the organization ran. Four months later I experienced my first Conference. With all the supplies for Conference loaded into my pickup, I drove to Vegas. This was my first trip to Vegas at that.

Conference attendees—Photo by Kimberly Zapata
Conference attendees—Photo by Kimberly Zapata

We had 16 scheduled volunteers that year: a few Board Member’s employees and six Al D. Scholars; people like Ed Chavarria and Chrissy Shull. John Johnson and David Kelso also volunteered that year. I’m also pretty sure that was the year, a gentleman with a hat and a cigar saved my life by letting me know he knew a little bit about AV stuff (Gus Diamond). The Board worked the Merch Booth, and occasionally stood at a classroom or the Expo Door. We had 17 classes for 34 class hours; taught by 25 instructors.

After a year, I was writing articles for The Point, was responsible for the maintenance of all the databases and mailing lists, processing all orders/sales, doing basic accounting, and stocking all supplies and materials the APP utilized. I wasn’t folding, addressing, and stamping The Point anymore – we were having a mail-house do that. I was doing all the certificates for membership and for Conferences; and all the member updates on the website, master list, and accounting system. By then I handled all incoming calls and emails, which included inquiries about membership, calls from piercees and piercers, calls from the Press, Educators, Health Inspectors, and pretty much anyone looking for the APP. I still referred calls to the Board of Directors if they were beyond my scope of knowledge.

I made arrangements for the APP to attend a variety of health conferences, including the American Public Health Association, the American College Health Association, the National Association of Local Boards of Health, and the American School Health Association. I found lodging in a variety of cities for Board Members who were manning these tables; and usually tying in a Board meeting at the same time.

Since we were still watching our pennies, I did a lot of comparison shopping for the APP in an effort to keep costs down and maximize the efficiency. From office supplies, to lodging, to printer costs, to postage and shipping costs, I took our financial status into account at every step.

And my duties at the Conference continued to grow.

We have struggled as an Association over the years. Twelve years ago we struggled with financial limitations, but had a dedicated, strong Board who worked together extremely well. Later, as an Association, we struggled with Board dynamics but still moved faithfully forward. The occasional industry drama threatened to derail and distract us from the mission of the APP and, while the office was certainly affected by these challenges, the work still got done. We still did outreach. We still had a conference which expanded and developed.

The office moved to Kansas when I did in 2005. My step-kids and partner became my informal assistants, helping to do mailings, stuff badge packets, research technology purchases, and maintain our computers.

Then, in a blink of an eye, a decade plus has past. The office is no longer house-bound – we have a “real” office, four walls and a lot of paper. The kids all grew up and now there’s a part-time clerk to assist with the work. The Point is all digital; after growing from a newsletter of a few pages of black and white to a full color Journal. I have been through seven elections, have seen Board Members come and go and return–some successful, some less so–all sacrificing personal time and all passionate about this organization. Our Officers and Board Members have grown in number and we have all grown older. Our membership has increased substantially. Our industry has grown, survived a horrible recession, and is now thriving. People know who the APP is! There are 14 active committees, and a handful or two of sub-committees. The administrative work for the organization has grown so much I can’t list all my duties here. I believe it’s time to expand the permanent workforce of the APP, again. I am now surprised when someone calls in to ask about aftercare, as our education via social media has been so pronounced. People still call weekly asking “How do I become a Body Piercer?”

And just look at our Conference now: 60 speakers, 40 classes, and 95 class hours. It is now cool to volunteer (70 + people are now willing to give their time and effort).

So maybe Paul King was right when we talked the other day about the growth of the organization. I did push for the growth of this organization and our industry. I did find new outreach avenues and thought up new projects to do. I did figure out ways to enhance our presence and encourage us to move forward with better, more efficient methods both in and out of the office. I did dream of a day when we had committees to help foster new ideas and collaborations among our members and did get to see that come to full fruition. I did push to bring in new speakers/instructors so we could provide new topics and new life to core classes. I did foster new ways of using our Attendees to do the work of Conference – if someone is to benefit, let it be our Attendees and our Members rather than outside help. I did try to improve upon our technology as a way to minimize frustrations and delays at Conference. I did insist that the Board plan Conference earlier and set deadlines; knowing it helped to organize, streamline, and promote expansion and growth. I did compile statistics, spreadsheet after crazy spreadsheet – because it’s not enough to grow; you need to show how you got there. I thought that was part of my job.

How has the office changed in the last 12 years? Completely. It’s completely changed. The growth is what we ALL wanted for the APP and our Industry – and terrifying just the same. Change is beautiful and terrifying and part of life. Yes, Paul – I pushed for all of this growth – I pushed, and you pushed – and all of us pushed; in our ideas, and our thousands of nights in front of the computer, in our crazy meetings which involved love and death and food glorious food, in our articles and our voices; in our internet face-booking re-gram posty-posts; in our countless hours in front of classes and behind tables at conferences; in our gazillion emails, google docs, and spreadsheet upon spreadsheet; in our first drafts and our final drafts – we pushed and grew and changed this organization and our industry– it was after all, our job.

Point #70: Announcement of Body Piercing Archive

ANNOUNCING THE APP BODY PIERCING ARCHIVE

Paul KingPaul King
Committee Chairperson and APP Treasurer

Anyone who has sat in on one of my classes knows my passion for recovering and preserving our community’s history. Historic Western attitudes of pathology and shame led to the loss of much of our history. I am filled with honor and excitement to publicly announcement the Association of Professional Piercer’s newest committee, the Body Piercing Archive (BPA). The formation of the Body Piercing Archive was authorized by the Association of Professional Piercers’ Board of Directors in June 2014. We have been working behind the scenes on establishing a committed team of workers, an organizational structure, and some preliminary goals.

Mission Statement:

“The mission of the Body Piercing Archive is to select, collect, document, preserve, exhibit, and interpret the personal, social, and material evolving histories of Body Piercing to ensure these artifacts are available to present and successive generations.”

For those familiar with archival collections, the goals laid out in this mission statement are daunting, requiring a commitment of time, training, and resources. We are proceeding methodically by rolling out the archive as manageable and contained projects.

Our first major short-term projects will be the organizing and cataloging of the APP’s corporate internal records as well as developing two public exhibits during the APP 2015 conference. In honoring the APP’s 20th anniversary, we will display the last 20 years’ development of our conference, outreach, and education. In addition, we will honor the passing of a piercing pioneer, Raelyn Gallina, with a memorial exhibit.

At this time, we are actively seeking loaned or donated items of importance pertaining to the APP’s history as well as Raelyn Gallina’s personal life and piercing career. Please contact us if you have any images, material items, ephemera, correspondences, and/or stories that you feel may be of interest to the BPA.

Some archives place a greater emphasis and dedication of resources to preserving and protecting objects at the expense of creating access to historical knowledge. Preservation will certainly be an important element of our efforts; however, early on we decided we wanted to focus our initial attention on projects that allow for community usage. Someday, the BPA committee and APP Board of Directors may consider a permanent facility; however, this is not a realistic goal today. For now, we will busy ourselves with getting a digital online archive developed for and promoted to the body piercing community, including professionals, researchers, and the general public. If the inaugural exhibitions of 2015 are well received, we will continue each year with new display themes as part of the annual conference experience.

Additionally, part of our medium-range goals is to form and build alliances with established archives that already have or are committed to receive collections of our history. We will be announcing some exciting collaborative developments very soon!

The Body Piercing Archive committee would like to give a special thank you to Barry Blanchard and Tod Almighty for their service and support. The richness and diversity of the history of body piercing can only be preserved and shared with community participation.

Contact information:

Please direct all general inquiries to:

Current Committee members:

  • Paul R. King – Committee Chair & APP Treasurer
  • Brian Skellie – Committee Member & APP President
  • Matte Erickson – Committee Member
  • Becky Dill – Committee Member
  • Kendra Berndt – Committee Member & The Point Co-Editor

Point #70: From the Editor – Kendra

Kendra Jane Berndt

“We can not know where are going if we do not know from where we come.”

-unknown

It is an incredible honor to be saying “Hello” and officially introducing myself as one of new editorial team for The Point. I have had the pleasure of being a contributing editor and author for The Point over the past 3 years. Some of you may know me, however most of you probably won’t. In the grand scheme of things I am definitely a new kid on the block. This month I celebrate 5 years of piercing, and I come by this industry a different path than most. I bring with me a bachelor’s degree in both science and education, with much of my past experience focusing on education in one manner or another. I had the distinguished pleasure of being chosen an Al D Scholar in 2010, and now sit on the Al D Selection Committee. I have also since been a research assistant for Paul King, and join him on the Body Piercing Archive Committee, as well as am a Super Volunteer at Conference. You will once again find me behind the registration desk this year. Come say hi! I am greatly looking forward to working with our new team, Marina and Jim, to bring you the industry’s only dedicated trade journal.

In this, our first issue as a new team, we want to take you on a journey over the past two decades, as we get ready to celebrate the Association of Professional Piercers’ 20th anniversary this June in Las Vegas. It is amazing to see what this industry has grown from and I personally can not wait to see what the future holds for both the APP and the body piercing industry as a whole.

Point #70: Evolution of Our Industry from a Piercer’s Perspective

Luis Garcia, Vendor Liaison

by Luis Garcia

Though it might not seem it to some, our industry is a fairly new one. One of the things I find so amazing about body piercing is how much it has changed and evolved over the last 20 years. When I look back, I thought it would be an amusing trip down memory lane (and a good read) to recount how I’ve seen body piercing evolve as an industry, and how our clients and trends have evolved with it.

 

I began piercing in the early ’90s, in fact as of December 20, 2015 it will be 25 years.  At that time, very few people got pierced. You would see nostril piercings or helix piercings, navel piercings, maybe the occasional tragus or tongue piercing, but little else was prominent. Heavier piercings were generally relegated to the gay leather and fetish communities, punk rockers, and other subcultures.  Keep in mind this was in the very early days of public internet use, so people had to find out about piercings from magazines or from seeing people on the street. Sure, cities like New York, San Francisco, and LA had more prominent subcultures for body piercing, but most other cities had more of a “proto” subculture when it came to body piercing. Even I had trouble getting pierced before then, having many of my piercings done during goth industrial nights at local clubs in the late ‘80s, or at leather parties I had snuck into.

 

At that time clients were almost all enthusiasts, and were always insanely grateful to have someone to help them get the piercings they wanted. They took aftercare seriously and listened to what you told them to use. There was little worry about conflicting information, because there were few people giving out this information.

 

Most of us still pierced with clamps. Body jewelry was fairly expensive to purchase wholesale, and it was limited compared to what we can get today. Internal threading below 14 gauge was hard to come by, and there weren’t as many lengths and diameter options.

 

Paul King preparing to pierce Alicia Silverstone’s navel in the Aerosmith video “Cryin’”
Paul King preparing to pierce Alicia Silverstone’s navel in the Aerosmith video “Cryin’”

The first big changes I remember came with two big public media navel piercings. The first was when Rachel from Season 3 of the Real World got her navel pierced on the show. The second was when Alicia Silverstone “got her navel pierced” (it was a stunt navel) in Aerosmith’s “Cryin’” video (by our lovely treasurer Paul King!), both in 1993. This very visible jump into the mainstream media started body piercing’s slow crawl into the limelight we see it in today. I immediately saw a jump in business and a growing interest in body piercing.

 

It was around this time that I also found usenet newsgroups and the group rec.arts.bodyart. For you young folks, usenet newsgroups were a bare bones way to communicate and interact on the early internet, similar to what Facebook does now, but closer to how reddit works. Rec.arts.bodyart was the first place I found to share and gain information and knowledge about body piercing without having to travel to a convention. Even so, things were pretty limited, and bandwidth was much lower than what we are used to today. There was no easy uploading of photos, very few people could afford digital cameras, and even scanners were still fairly pricey, so it was mostly all text-based posts back and forth. This was also when I found out about the APP, nabbing any of the few newsletters that were available.

 

In 1994, the first, and what I would consider the most important and influential body art website launched, Body Modification Ezine, or BME, and it was glorious. Now we (both piercers and enthusiasts) had a place at our fingertips that we could submit images and look at what everyone was doing all over the world. No more waiting for quarterly publications like Body Play and PFIQ, or the tiny bit of info you could get from tattoo magazines.

 

As more and more people gained cheap and easy access to the internet, BME grew. They added live chat functionality, a section for clients to share their experiences, a question of the day section, an extreme section for harder modifications, and even an “adult” section for the more saucy side of things. I remember spending hours on BME almost every day, never getting tired of everything there was to see and learn.

 

By the late ’90s, it was more and more common to have clients bring in print images of things they had seen on BME. This is where the type of clients I’d see started to change. While many were still light piercing enthusiasts, they weren’t the die hard piercees I had become accustomed to seeing. They were much more squeamish and sensitive to the portfolios they flipped through.

 

It was also at this point that freehand techniques started to spread slowly out into the industry, causing a slight fuss. Many piercers, myself included, were concerned about the safety of these new techniques, having sharps so near your fingers during the procedure. Of course, as time went on, many of us did begin to test and adopt freehand methods, seeing that there were certain benefits to be reaped, both for us and our clients.

 

As the early ‘00s rolled in, BME introduced a new companion website, IAM.bmezine.com. Modeled after social websites like Livejournal, but meant specifically for those in the body mod community. In many ways, it did things the right way before Myspace and Facebook existed. With the ability to design your own page, post diary entries, create your own forums, and easily upload images (that could also be auto submitted to the main BME website), it became a huge hit within the industry, and with even the lightest of piercing enthusiasts. This was also when I started attending the annual APP conference. It was amazing to have somewhere with so many piercers all in one place, all sharing and learning.

 

With the mid ‘00s came Myspace and Facebook, followed by Twitter, and the ushering in the of the social media era. As more and more people joined these sites, made connections, posted photos, and shared opinions, the need for a dedicated social website started to slowly dwindle, and less and less people stayed on IAM.

 

The other thing that rolled in with the mid ’00s was the public eye being drawn to some of the heavier things some piercers were doing, and posting for public consumption. Several piercers got themselves into some trouble here and there because of it, so many of us started to be more conservative with what we offered at our studios.

 

It was also in the mid ‘00s that I noticed clientele had drastically begun to change. A good portion of clients had no interest in piercing as a whole. They instead just wanted the latest accessory. While studios had always been a retail business, this pushed piercing studios into a more retail mindset, having to really consider the full customer experience and customer service became a greater focus than it had ever been. What once had been risqué for many was now chic, and many clients wanted that chic boutique experience. With the proliferation of smartphones, clients also began to have immediate and constant access to the internet wherever they went. This brought up companies like Yelp in the mid to late ‘00s, where anyone could review anything, making the customer experience one of the most important things. This didn’t just go for in-shop interactions, but also for any online interactions, and even personal blogs and webpages being scrutinized by potential clients. This caused more and more of us to realizing that once something is on the internet, it never really disappears.

 

It was also in this timeframe that freehand techniques began to become more standard and accepted techniques as previously. This is partially due in turn due to the internet as well, especially with how easy it was to get information and interact with other piercers. As this information spread, more and more of us started to ditch piercing clamps, with some taking strong stands that one was better than the other (when the truth is all that matters is that the client gets a clean, safe, and properly placed piercing). It did lead to many (in my opinion) fun and amusing debates amongst us. The annual APP Conference & Exposition also had grown exponentially, with more piercers wanting to test the waters and experience what had made so many of us fall in love with that one week a year.

 

As the late ‘00s and early ‘10s rolled in, Facebook, Twitter, and even newer internet based  technologies like Instagram and Pinterest had all become household names. Clients could instantly save a photo they saw to their phones and bring it in. Piercers could immediately share their work and have hundreds if not thousands of people liking, tagging or repinning these images in a matter of minutes to hours. This is what still amazes me sometimes; how quickly and easily information can spread, both good and bad. This also lead to the pseudo-death of BME and IAM. While many still visit the site, and even still have IAM accounts, Facebook with its ease of connection–one place where you can chat, blog, and share all aspects of your life and lifestyle–now exists and IAM and BME have suffered because of this. Similar to how small businesses have been hurt by big box stores.

 

And that, my babies, is the end of my recount of how I’ve seen our industry, clientele, and the interaction of the two change over the years. Hopefully you have not only learned that I am old as dirt, but that these changes have made for some interesting and great things happening to our industry and organization.

 

Point #69: President’s Corner

Brian Skellie headshot at 2014 APP conference by April BerardiBrian Skellie
APP President

Some of the most fundamental ideas about piercing are those that are most intriguing and still relevant to question. What materials are available now to make jewelry for initial healing and prolonged wear in the body safe? How does one accurately direct an edge while traversing a body part to get consistent results? What can be done to minimize harm to the client and risk to the worker?

Part of what we can delight in as piercing practitioners is the potential for continued qualitative improvement in our work. Rumination upon these questions that can incite change, coupled with a willingness to progress and try new options opens us to the possibility that each procedure, each interaction and connection made with patrons can be our best to date. We have in our hands the means to find persuasive science and novel approaches to the challenges that we face, through access to libraries and communication with colleagues worldwide.

Presenters and performers preparing for the voyage to LBP 2014
Presenters and performers preparing for the voyage to LBP 2014

The constant flow of information among our peers engages this and advances our desire for better outcomes based on both understanding and inspiration. You are welcome to join in the conversation, add to it what you can offer, and benefit from the advantages of persistent educational opportunities. This organization exists to act as a crucible for bringing our ideas and skills together to make something more versatile, robust, complete, healthier, and easier to disseminate for the betterment of our craft and our society.

One of the aspects of this trade that I cherish most is the occasion to share with others what fascinates me about our work, and to learn from them in exchange. Whether that may be in written correspondence, a phone call, video conference, in person (or in a studio), or at an event. It is encouraging to observe that virtually every one of you seems to partake in them as often as possible—and this is evidenced by the many thousands of professional conversations logged online and the outstanding international attendance at several major educational events this year, including over twenty countries represented at our Conference.

Since the 2014 APP Conference, volunteer members working with the organization have traveled as educators to share ideas related to safety, theory, technique, technology, and history to conferences held by APP associate corporate members  in Germany, Mexico, and Italy. As a participant at each, I can say they have exemplified and improved upon some of the best aspects of our event, and at the same time were quite different and unique from one another, apart from geographic location and language.

IMG_20141004_114437
Bruno BMA describing the importance of asepsis at the 2014 BMXnet Conference in Essen, Germany

From October 2-5, the annual BMXnet event took place in Essen, Germany, and our business members Ana Paula Escalante, Christiane Löfblad, and Ryan Ouellette were welcomed back to the creative Unperfekthaus space to provide both informative lectures and hands-on demonstrations in technical skills workshops. The event is equipped to allow procedures to be performed live, and I had the privilege of demonstrating how to lose a connection and reconnect during a nostril piercing. (Sorry, David!)

Former APP Presidents Elayne Angel and Bethra Szumski (Secretary), Paul King (Treasurer), and I collectively taught a dozen classes and workshops during the event. An important element of our participation was to introduce the ideals and mission of the APP organization to new people. To that end we held a panel discussion with Ryan on how to continue our work to help fellow organizations such as BMXnet, ASAP, APTPI and LBP.

As an event that draws more international attendees than ever before, it seemed that this year English-speaking classes filled the schedule (38 in English/9 in German), and this was one of the topics discussed during the Future of BMXnet roundtable, led by one of the organizers, Stephan Strestik. They seem to have great potential, with their strong mix of educators and open exchange of ideas. The inclusion of an “all-you-can-eat” buffet for breakfast, lunch, and dinner and all-day soft drinks, coffee, and tea was very helpful, especially for those who might have skipped a meal or had to eat on the run at other events due to a full schedule.

The LBP's well-assembled dossier for their 2014 event
The LBP’s well-assembled dossier for their 2014 event

A few short weeks later, a voyage to Mexico City followed for the LBP 2do Congreso: La Asociación Latinoamericana de Body Piercing. Along with board member Jef Saunders and officers Bethra and Paul, we reunited with Ana Paula, serving as LBP Secretary, and LBP President Danny Yerna, who was previously APP International Liaison. Registration and entry to the provided transportation was fluid, and the participants who filled the meeting place quickly made it into their seats with their necessities and a binder full of all of the lecture handouts, which was provided as reading material for the road trip. Even the APP materials and class details were translated into Spanish! This allowed for in-depth discussion en route, and prepared everyone to ask informed questions—and cut down considerably on live translation time. The translation of materials in advance was first rate, and gave me peace of mind as a non-native presenter, since my competence in Spanish is not yet what I aspire to. (Aprendo español, pero yo no hablo con fluidez.)

We traveled with a large group of the attendees to the Centro Vacacional y de Convenciones IMSS Metepec, near Puebla, at the base of the Iztaccíhuatl – Popocatépetl National Park and namesake volcanoes. We drove through a beautiful nature reserve part of the park on the way. When we arrived, we toured the grounds and got a sense of the harmonious combination of natural and professional spaces the organizers found so attractive.

This event follows several successful APP Mexico conferences, and has evolved in a significantly different format in an all-inclusive setting—where transportation, lodging, and meals were all covered together with the event. Everyone was invited to take part in every class and workshop, and the planned social events, as well as to dine together. Even special guest Fakir Musafar and his partner Cleo Dubois spent a great deal of time mingling with the group outside of the auditorium.

The next week transported me to Venice, Italy where I met Paul and long-time APP conference participant Ron Garza for the Body Art Development International Piercing Class and Workshop event. This was a new offering by the APTPI affiliated organizers, with technique and theory lectures, coupled with hands-on supervised training. The format was punctual and could be repeated for focus on specifics with expert direction.

Our 20th Conference is in production now, with plenty of new ideas for you! See you at Bally’s in Las Vegas (June 7-12, 2015).

Point #68: 2014 Banquet Dinner

Kendra JaneKendra Jane

The buzz around this year’s banquet dinner began days before the event, with tickets selling out the night that registration opened! We knew it would be a packed house, everyone dressed in their finest or sideshow attire, but what we didn’t know was the extra special entertainment that awaited us from Chris Glunt, your incoming Medical Liaison. From push ups to burpees and even a few lap dances, Chris put his back into it to ensure as many raffle tickets as possible were sold. When enough tickets were on the line he even puckered up for a kiss with the very handsome Paul King. It was a highlight for everyone in attendance in an evening filled with laughter and a heightened sense of community.

Photo by Autumn Swisher
Photo by Autumn Swisher.

From there the entertainment got into the swing of it with a great sideshow act from Swing Shift Entertainment. (They have been long-time attendees of Conference so for many, they were watching not only performers but friends.)

As the entertainment wound down the doors were opened to non-tickets holders, our board members, both old and new, took the stage to either say goodbye or introduce themselves. Announcements were made, and awards were handed out. Joshua Benjamin and Diablo Organics took home the awards for both technical and creative innovations. Best individual booth went to Blessings to You, and best multiple booth went to Tawapa. After a long list of thank yous, which brings tears to her eyes each year, Caitlin McDiarmid had the honor of announcing the 2014 Josh Prentice Volunteer award. This year’s recipient has dedicated countless hours to bettering the industry and currently spends many an hour answering Tumblr emails, reblogging piercing after piercing, and giving his time to many of the APP’s committees, Ryan Ouellette. Rounding out the awards portion of the evening was Elayne Angel, who presented the President’s Award to Brian Skellie, who over the past many years has served to educate piercers around the world and keep knowledge at the forefront of our industry. (Brian is also the APP’s incoming President.)

Chris Glunt and Paul King's epic kiss. Photo by Autumn Swisher.
Chris Glunt and Paul King’s epic kiss. Photo by Autumn Swisher.

Bethra also had the distinct privilege of presenting Steve Joyner with a Recognition Award from Arkansas body artists to thank him for his support and work on their state’s legislation over the past years.

As always, the evening was brought to a close with the drawing of the final top ten raffle prizes. Some of this year’s prizes were:

  • $15,000 worth of Industrial Strength Jewelry
  • $12,000 in credit from Anatometal
  • $5,000 from Body Vision Los Angeles (BVLA)
  • H2Ocean prize pack valuing almost $1500

The grand prize (from Industrial Strength Jewelry) was won by Javier, owner and piercer at Amour Real Tattoo Banquedano in Chile. This prize will be a real game changer for Javier and his studio. There could not have been a better winner, and his excitement was uncontainable, which got the whole room buzzing. No one could have asked for a better end to the evening.

A special thank you to those who sponsored our banquet dinner: Industrial Strength Body Jewelry; Anatometal, Inc.; LeRoi Fine Body Jewelry; The Safe Piercing App; and Kaos Softwear.

Next year the APP Conference will be celebrating our 20th anniversary and we know that the banquet will be one to remember! Ensure you get your banquet tickets when you complete your early registration so you don’t miss any of the fun!