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MGblues

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Posts posted by MGblues

  1. My first one was done on my 19th birthday, February 13th, 1985.

    Because my Dad has a tattoo, I always wanted one and knew I'd get one as soon I got legal age to do it.

    Since I grew up in bum-fucked western North Carolina there was only one shop within a 100 mile radius then. It was named "J.B. Davis Tattoo & Tavern". The tattoo shop was in the back of a biker bar in Waynesville N.C.

    I was way more scared of going in the biker bar as a skinny, long haired punk kid than I was of getting the tattoo, but I went through with it.

    Wasn't as bad as I though it'd be, so I kept getting more as the years went by. Now I've turned 46, my arms are covered to the wrist, and I'm fixing to start a backpiece.

    I never had it covered up, cause I love it to this day, but I did have it touched up in 2010. It's the spiderweb with the creepy skull/spiderlegs thingy.

    P.S. I was able to keep it hidden from my Mom for 2 weeks...

    She saw it and slapped the shit out of it!

  2. I remember seeing that design as a very small child, maybe 1969 or 1970 when I was about 3 or 4 years old.

    My great grandmother had this huge wind-up clock on her wall with a glass front that had the ROA hand painted on it. The cross had an unpainted circle left out of the center so that when the pendulum swung back and forth you could see it move side to side.

    That clock both fascinated and scared the shit out of me, but I couldn't stop staring at. It was scary, dramatic, sad, and powerful, and I've never, ever forgotten it.

    I stumbled onto the Bert Grimm version of it a while back and it was like "There it is, this is what I want as my back piece".

    It's like karma just worked. Everything is clicking. The money to do it, the artist wants to do it, the time for it, and the girlfriend is on-board to help with the aftercare.

    I plan starting that back piece next month, and I'm so stoked!

  3. I couldn't have been more than 3 when I noticed my Dad had the old school skull with the snake crawling through the the eye socket tattooed on his bicep. I didn't understand how it got there or why it was permanent, but I damned sure knew I wanted one. I was hooked on anything to do with tattoos from then on, always have been, always will be.

    I found the Sailor Jerry flash version of that skull and snake last year and got it big as Hell on my calf. I can't wait to show him the next time I see him.

  4. After 52 years on the planet with no tattoos what so ever, my girlfriend decided out of the blue this past Saturday that for St Patrick's day she'd get a shamrock and 3 ladybugs, on her butt. She actually went through with it and sat like a trooper.

    There won't be any pictures of hers, but since she did it I got this little guy as a memento of one of the most awesome days I've ever spent with her.

  5. I definitely didn't have the intention of creating any negativity or drama by posting this here. I'm aware that a good number of tattooers are not big Facebook or instagram and may not have been aware of this situation through there. The way I see it, something positive did come from this- a lot of people who care strongly about tattooing pulled together as a community (rather than a 'mob') and supported each other.

    I didn't see it as a negative thing. There were some harsh comments for sure (me included, I apologize), but some good came from it also.

    As a group of dedicated fans, clients, collectors of good work, and the artists who pour their hearts into giving us the art we want to wear till we're worm food, LST to me represents a tiny portion of an already small sub-culture. One that respects the history, tradition, and ethics of the artform we love.

    Someone who was doing something wrong got called out for it on a public platform, and as a result hopefully learned a harsh lesson in the error of their ways.

    If no one had spoke out it would just been one more occurrence of a lack of ethics and originality being allowed to further dilute the little pool we swim in.

    Sorry, I'll get off my soapbox now.

  6. And another thing, Sully, this is such a bullshit statement:

    "Sue does not keep a Facebook or EVER advertise her work online and keeps her success and work popularized only by word of mouth and not internet hype in the TRUE FASHION of REAL tattooing."

    I would love to play up the "I don't participate in the internet" crap because WE ALL HATE IT TOO, but dude, doing hipster tattoos in Brooklyn you don't need to advertise on the net. Brooklyn/New York is it's own thing and really with the amount of people tattooing there, you'd expect the place to be dog eat dog, but it's not. TONS of people getting tattooed. Try doing that shit in middle of nowhere or some suburban town with five other shop. The language of the world nowadays, unfortunately is the internet. I hate it, but that's what people speak. In this economy, it makes sense to speak French in France.

    I live in the Middle of Nowheresville, Tennessee, U.S.A...It's like being in no man's land. There's at least 10 tattoo shops in a 25 mile radius. These shops FB every fucking tattoo they do, have awesome websites, commercials on every radio station...yada, yada, yada. Most of the shit you could get in these shops looks like it was done in some dudes kitchen in trade for a 12 pack of PBR. (No offense to PBR)

    I guess I know now why the tattoo shop I've been going to for the past 2 years almost never posts on FB and doesn't have a website, but they still manage to have a bigger and more loyal clientele than any of the others.

    Maybe reputation and word of mouth do still count for something even in the internet age.

  7. ERT has some great tattooers working there. Personally, I hope everything works out for them. I hadn't seen anyone posting anything negative on the shop page itself, so I'm not sure why they didn't just take down the flash album in question.

    I honestly wish no ill will to Sue, the ERT shop or anyone who works there, but really, how in the Hell could they not know what what she was up to and either not let her put it on their FB page, or deleted that shit before it possibly ruined their shop reputation and started an shitstorm on the internet.

  8. Sue Jeiven, a tattooer at East River Tattoo was selling "her" flashbook at the Philly Convention. I put 'her' in quotations because the book contains direct tracings of custom work from Ezra Haidet, AP Shrewsbury, Ron Henry Wells and others. The story first broke on Instagram but it's made it's way to Facebook today:

    Flash by Sue Jeiven

    Sucks, looks like East River Tattoo deleted their Facebook page.... :(

    Hopefully that shop got deleted too.

  9. As a client it's one thing for me to go get a tattoo from a Sailor Jerry flash re-draw because the design has some significance to me, knowing full well that the design I picked is iconic and unoriginal. I got mine because my Dad got the same frigging image in 1953. She's scratching this shit on people who are probably 1st timers and don't know any better and think they're getting this cool piece of original art.

    From the looks of her work I think the reason she only uses all black and only black is because her Ebay starter tattoo kit didn't come with a shader and color ink.

    Flipping someone Else's designs 180 with a Xerox copier and tracing doesn't constitute originality in my book.

    I guess they didn't teach ethics as part of Tattoo 101 at the tattoo school she went to.

    I can foresee broken hands in her future.

  10. I'm lucky, I guess.

    My Girl who I've been with for the last 9 years is a total pinky who just happens to think heavily tattooed men look sexy.

    My arms are covered in skulls, smoke, spiderwebs, demons, a reaper, dice and cards, razor, dragons, and a couple of cats (and the number 13).

    I never gave much thought as to how other people would think of me due to the imagery, I just got what I wanted, but the way I look has allowed me (and her by proxy) to live a very shit-free life.

  11. I have quite a few tattoos based off of things I have drawn, but none of them are tattooed exactly the way I drew it. When I'm sure I want one of my own ideas tattooed on me I take in the best drawing I can do, and ask first "will this work on my body where I want it"? If the answer is "Yes", then I just ask for it to be re-drawn so it will fit and be "tattooey".

    This has worked for me for on a good number of tattoos now.

  12. just checked it out thanks for the link, Josh woods has to be the odds on favorite, don't know if he is well known but he looks to be as good as brandon bond in the new school type tattoos.

    disclaimer- to my untrained eye

    Josh Woods works out of Black 13 Tattoo Parlor in Nashville, Tn. Here's a link to his gallery : gallery meta title*|*Black 13 Tattoo

    His style of tattooing is totally not what I'd wear, but I can appreciate the skill it takes to pull off the tattoos he does.

    I didn't much care for the show, but then I hate "reality TV" anyway.

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