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Showing content with the highest reputation on 02/23/2017 in all areas

  1. A few day after photos. Sorry for the poor quality.
    4 points
  2. Testing for my 2nd permanent brown belt in TKD tomorrow. My kids are both done now w/the tests in our dojang under our instructor and will be testing in June for their temporary black belts w/Grand Master Jung. I will test for mine next February. We were able to attend our instructor's test this past December when she tested and achieved 6th Dan, and then a couple weeks ago we attended the temporary black belt test of one of our students, and he promoted Monday so that was exciting. His son will be testing with my kids in June.
    4 points
  3. I've come to learn, if you're a perfectionist then tattooing may not be the hobby for you :D
    4 points
  4. Well then, obviously I must oblige. The heart is what I just had done Sunday. Sadly, I'm a bleeder, so fresh pictures rarely come out instagram-worthy. Hopefully my attachments worked, I'm used to embedding pictures with html on forums, so please let me know if I should do something differently next time. I have a few other tattoos, but these are the ones I have pictures for right now.
    2 points
  5. Been away for about a week - Lynn and I took our son and his family to Disney World as part of our membership in the SKI Club...Spend the Kids Inheritance. We'd rather do things with them now than die and leave them money. It was the first time there for our daughter-in-law and our twin 8 year old grand daughters. Our son and grand son have been there before with us on an earlier trip when he was going through the divorce from his first wife. What a great time we had. 5 days, 4 parks pretty much non-stop. Although the girls had a few moments along the way from being tired they were amazing - and rode every roller coaster and fist ride we went on. Their reactions were generally..that was really scary...let's do it again. Here are Lynn and me enjoying dinner at Disney Springs a few hours before the rest of the family arrived. Me with our twin grand daughters taking a break at Epcot. And the winning event of the trip for the girls was having dinner with the Disney Princesses at Cinderella's Castle. For the quality of the food and the experience, well worth the cost. Lynn and I had champagne with dinner and the girls loved meeting the princesses who came to each table and signed autographs, talked with the girls and took pictures with them. And, we were inside the dining room - on the upper floor of the castle - during the fireworks so you got a truly unique view of watching them from inside the castle. The smiles say it all.
    2 points
  6. Lots of great advice here...all saying the same thing. Love your tattoo - each one is personal and it is the little quirks that make them so. The issue isn't the tattoo, it's your OCD. In the famous words from the movie Frozen.....Let it go.
    2 points
  7. Don't forget to tip your artist & include that into your budget.
    2 points
  8. Healing has been phenominal! Yesterday marked the end of black and gray work. Knocked out the tiger strips as well. Next Week we start packing in color! We also finished shelling out our next project for my back. 6'3" there will be a lot of ground to cover.
    2 points
  9. Meh, messy tattoo I'd rather look at a tattoo than read a paragraph. Too much text. A picture is worth 1000 words.
    2 points
  10. I Have a tattoo from Oliver Peck and it has a mistake in it,but it's a tattoo and I don't dwell on it, it's no big deal,I have forgotten about it. tattoos are hand made art on the human body, that imperfection on your 6 is tiny and not worth stressing over or trying to fix, relax and move on to your next tattoo.
    2 points
  11. Maybe consider "fixing" the obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) instead of "fixing" the misplaced dot on the tattoo?
    1 point
  12. 1 point
  13. But I mean, I have to admit I laughed out loud at that tattoo.
    1 point
  14. You can't. Or you could probably laser off that little part and have it redone. It will be a long process and probably not worth it, because you seem hellbent on not being happy about your tattoo regardless of the little dot or not. But if you're that crazy about details and perfection, my tip would be to stay as far away from tattoos as possible. They are made by humans, who will get things wrong from time to time. They also tattoo living skin, which reacts different from client to client, and during your healing you can mess it up yourself. Even if your tattoo is executed and healed perfectly, it will eventually fade and become some barely readable mess- and/or you'll get a cut that turns into a scar which will alter the tattoo.
    1 point
  15. lape

    Japanese traditional sleeve ??

    Of the tattoos from your artists you could have posted, you posted something that looks like a blind scratcher first try at a tattoo... I also don't see any Japanese work on your instagram.
    1 point
  16. Thank you bongsau, that was the answer i was hoping for and i will be sure to tip well
    1 point
  17. Wow - Tim is killing it! You have to be over the moon. @Baboom
    1 point
  18. Remind yourself of the other 99 percent of the tattoo that was done right, rather than the 1 percent dot. We are all from the same imperfect race, human :)
    1 point
  19. sweet jesus that's awesome
    1 point
  20. Yes, hon, get the rest of your arm tattooed around it ? But not just yet, for right now just wear some long sleeves and stop thinking about it.
    1 point
  21. Out of curiousity...how do you go about marking the triangulation tattoos on people that are covered in tattoo?
    1 point
  22. 1 point
  23. For the record, I'm quite iffy on the idea of them being carcinogenic. Articles such as this http://genyu.net/2012/12/11/shedding-light-on-uv-tattoos/ Explain that it does not contain any known carcinogens, simply things whose carcinogenic properties are unknown. And frankly, a freckle-sized dot of ink is gonna be a lot less dangerous regardless of what's in it than the treatment itself. But the idea with glow paint isn't a bad one. We actually can do such things already using highlighter. Standard yellow highlighter doesn't show up well on the skin but glows brightly under blacklight. The difficulty is that treatments last as long as 6 weeks, so it results in a lot of reapplying depending on the area its on and every reapplication is a chance to make a small mistake. And those mistakes can compound, resulting in treatment that is off target. Our margins for error are 5 mm; so even a little bit is generally not acceptable If its a problem, I'll stop. But I figured that this didn't constitute a break in the rules mainly because I'm not talking about traditional tattooing. I'm not gonna take trade secrets and start using them against tattoo artists; I'm just gonna treat patients.
    1 point
  24. Since the forum won't let me post this in General discussion for whatever reason, I'll just ask it here. I'm a radiation therapist, which means that I treat cancer patients with high dose radiation. Part of that process involves placing triangulation tattoos on their body, basically just small black circle tattoos that we use to triangulate and target their treatment. We do this because it is extremely important to be accurate in our treatment and thus we need permanent, immovable reference points. My question is this: Does anyone here know of a good fluorescent "Black Light" tattoo ink? I ask because it would be very helpful to have an ink that could provide a good glowing dot when under blacklight. Not only would it limit the visibility of the tattoos for people who don't want to have them, but it would allow us to more easily mark people with dark skin or who have many natural spots that could be easily mistaken for a tattoo mark. One of my older colleges tried this years and years ago, but he could never find an ink that showed up brightly enough through the skin of anyone who wasn't very fair in complexion.
    1 point
  25. Don't let price be the deciding factor. If it is too much now, save up. Yes, you could probably get in the door for the top of your range. A little more money now is nothing compared to a lifetime of a tattoo you dislike or have to rework. This is going to be a very visible tattoo.
    1 point
  26. 1 point
  27. Ask your tattooer,simple as that.
    1 point
  28. I know you are trying not to go in blind, but we really can't answer that for you. It totally depends on the artist you choose, and how s/he charges, how fast s/he works, where you are located, etc. Make sure you look at *healed* work when you're selecting this artist. I assume you don't wanna pay for it twice ?
    1 point
  29. Welcome! Dig your art.
    1 point
  30. You are not going to find much sympathy here.You are talking to people who love tattoos,and some of us have truly bad ones that we live with.People who see your tattoo don't care what it says,or what it means too you.
    1 point
  31. Holy shit I can't imagine waiting that long to get a session. One place in Omaha I called when I was looking for a new place opens their artists books like three times a year- and that's the only time you can make the appt. You have to wait outside in line and when they open the door, you get in and get what you can. We would've had to drive 2.5 hours each way, get a hotel, and take a day off work. They won't do appts over email or phone, in person only. Sooo we went elsewhere. The guy I go to is the hardest to get with in the shop but so worth it. Depending on how our schedules mesh up it's 2-4 months, so they let us make a couple two or three visits out at a time. My husbands artist is now working at becoming the second nipple/areola tattoo artist in the Midwest to specifically work w/breast cancer patients, so that will become his full time gig and the shop will only be part time, so he'll be really hard to get in to now.
    1 point
  32. Went last night to have a peony recolored. It was done by a different artist a few years ago and everything else sort of grew up around it. Now it feels more like a part of the whole shebang and I love the purple. Husband had more work done on his tiger. We were supposed to go before Christmas and ended up w/another blizzard so we had to reschedule..just like last winter argh! Also spent some discussion time w/my artist about continuing the wind/water theme elsewhere so I'm kinda excited about that.
    1 point
  33. Just got the Hannya done yesterday by Myke Chambers! I love it.
    1 point
  34. Life isn't perfect. Accept it and you'll live longer and be happier. ;-)
    1 point
  35. how do you know you were the first one to have a certain design in the first place ? (just saying) if you do have an original piece of art,and if someone does copy it ?! so that's a compliment then. like was said,who cares anyway ? personally I wouldn't be bothered by it,I wouldn't give a shit.
    1 point
  36. Got the colour started on this on Tuesday, can't wait to see the finished product. Going to be amazing.
    1 point
  37. @Cameron Jose Cute frog. Had this done today by Grant Gebbie, owner of Cuba Street Tattoo in Wellington NZ - @ggtattooer on IG. Very stoked. Bought my girlfriend a birthday present too... a Cheeky Thigh-Leopard she fell in love with last time we were at the shop together, rarely seen this side of the Pacific. Done by Joe @jj_doom. Shame you can't see his other paw here 'cause it looks like he's 'holding' her kneecap on both sides, cool placement.
    1 point
  38. The only thing you could possibly do is have them go over the lines again and thicken them to try to hide some mistakes. But then you lose all the delicateness of the swirls and risk making the font too hard to read. Leave it alone, all tattoos have mistakes if you look close enough and it looks great from a distance.
    1 point
  39. stop looking at it with a microscope and enjoy it. I'm sure your mom loves it. wear it with pride and move on to the next tattoo.
    1 point
  40. No one will notice, really! I'd bet that the vast majority of the people have certain spots on tattoo's that aren't exactly perfect (including me). Your tattoo is great. Own it. :)
    1 point
  41. It's fine. Don't attempt to have it "fixed."
    1 point
  42. Relax, trust me, no one'll notice that but you. It's a tattoo, not a drawing, they NEVER come out 100% perfect.
    1 point
  43. Really, fix the 'dot' in the 6? That is nothing, it's a tattoo.
    1 point
  44. Started my back with Marius Meyer yesterday.
    1 point
  45. Here are pics of the first session. Only went about 3 hours. Got a late start because of icy road. One more session of outline and then on to color and sharing. I'm very happy. Sent from my LG-LS997 using Tapatalk
    1 point
  46. Returned last week from two weeks in South India. In one of the villages that I visited, a young man approached me with a photo. He said "My name is Paul - you named me." In the photo taken in 2002 I am praying for a baby. The mother had brought the baby to me and asked me to give her son a "Christian name". Pretty awesome to meet him 15 years later. Sent from my Le Pan TC802A using Tapatalk
    1 point
  47. So far 2017 is rewarding me for the challenges of 2016... - Finally driving the turbo race car I've been dreaming about - Slayed another Dragon Dance with my kung fu group and took our routine to a new level. - Won an engineering contract to develop a major high voltage distribution system - Working on the succession plan for me and my partners to takeover our engineering firm this year - Reconnected with my tattoo sensei with my idea for a 2nd layer tattoo this season. - Still thinking my armpit tattoo idea is not a bad idea lol - Got tickets to DRI in April ...and who said tattooed people won't amount to anything ? thats what I thought! f*ck the status-quo GET TATTOO & BE AWESOME :cool:
    1 point
  48. YES!!!! I agree with everything you said!!!! I know people get tattooed for a lot of reasons. But if you cut to the core, sweep away all of the beautiful symbolism, meaning, memorials, and life stories, I think that the absolute essence, the elemental appeal of a tattoo it is that it is a PERMANENT addition to your body. IMHO, that is why all of us get tattooed. So yes, tattoos should be viewed as a commitment, whether you get a dot on your finger, or a body suit. As you said, @Synesthesia, commitment to the consequences of living as a tattooed person is really something to think about. I didn’t realize it until I had a couple of tattoos, but the pain matters to me a lot. I don’t like the pain, but I like that there is pain. It makes it hard, something you have to earn, and really want. Its like running a marathon: You get to 18 miles and you think you are going to die, that you can’t go on. But you press on because you want to reach your goal. You collapse on the ground at the finish line, your body is slammed for a week, but you are exhilarated that you did it. Because it was hard, and painful, and you pushed through it. Would you feel that way if you had driven the same 26 miles in you car? No! Too many things in life are easy and painless. I need some things that are difficult, and painful. And that is part of the appeal of tattoos to me. Committment, permanence and pain. To me all three are essential.
    1 point
  49. I haven't been tattooing very long, so I feel awkward replying to shit like this. But here goes. I like the act of tattooing. I love watching pigment go in the skin, seeing the line as it's being pulled across the stencil. I love it. So when I get requests for annoying shit, or things I'm sick of,(and denying that you ever get sick of shit is fucking retarded. We're humans. We get sick of shit. Period.), I try to just get past it in my head and think about the application. Not that I'm applying a tattoo that I hate, but that I'm applying a tattoo at all. And get right back into that mindset of enjoying the work aspect of it. Without trying to sound like a wagon jumper, I too like tribal. I love watchign the black just go in solid as fuck. I know this dude is just some dude looking to look just like his boys, but in my head I'm thinking, "man, this shit is going to make your buddies tribal look like shiiiiiiiiiiiiit!". I just try to get in that zone as much as I can. The clients though.... None of us can control the chaos that is our client base. That is the unknown quantity part of the job. Lots of shitheads, and lots of people who don't actullay want tattoos. They just want their very own "me too, guys! I did it too! See!" story. They spend hours trying to find the least tattoo-ish, most benign design possible and stick it somewhere no one will ever see it, because to them it's just proof that they did it too when the stories start flying. I try very hard to pick my battles, read clients and choose which ones would be receptive to some swaying. Not into something completely different to stroke my ego, but into a better planned out version of what they want. Just gotta pick the battles. Can't do it with everyone or you burn out, and you can't responsibly be the guy who says "fuck it, I know this will look, age and heal like crap, but i'll take your cash." All the time banging rainbows up their ass telling them how good of an idea it is to keep them and their dumb friends coming back for more. Regardless of how it will effect responsible tattooers who try to do a good, well thought out tattoo for the benefit of their clients. Just gotta do what I can to sleep at night, like trying to explain to people that upside down is upside down. I try. If they get it, awesome. If not, I'll at least try to do it clean. Sorry for the ramble. I just felt it on this one. I felt that I need to make an ass of myself on the internet. Word.
    1 point
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