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Beantoo

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  1. Oh yeah way better! You got a excellent healing skin, as i can see it! What i classical recommend as the skin is peeled or at your point "closed" you can moisture from now on with almond oil for example, a light oil with vitamin e (vitamin e helps the skin heal and prevents scars) Before you apply, always try out at another skin part and it is best to apply it on slightly damp skin, this helps to absorb. For the question about fixing... Depends on the used ink... some inks have no subtone, some a greenish and the next have a blueish tone... for an example if it was done with panthera ink they have no undertone... as you see there is no golden answer this you need to speak up with your artist and also depends how much black your going to "lose" the next couple month...(shouldn't be much) BUT if you go the second round with the same ink you classically just rework the single spots which should then level out over the following weeks... the girls arm i reworked we had to do the whole arm, depends... If you don't feel ready for a touch up or might be still a bit insecure then - it's simple... IT'S NOT YOUR TIME - LISTEN TO YOUR BODY IT KNOWS! :) But please also be respectful with the lifetime of the artist and give him enough lead time if you have done an appointment Hope i got it all [emoji869] IG: Beantoo_ttt Gesendet von iPhone mit Tapatalk
  2. just got a message by a friend who send me these thread... I'm a blackwork tattooer...and to be honest it's one of the most difficult technic, cause you have to pack it super solid in large areas, with different "soft/thick" skin...so it's not wondering I'm mostly repairing blackouts... problems like yours can arise for various reasons... could be a voltage/handspeed issue at this area(overworked/traumatized) or he had a "dirty" needle (plasma and vaseline get stuck together with pigment and fills the space between the needles) could also happen it was accidentally touched with dirty hands by a friend/animalnose, got sticked at sleeping(you can't remember)... and i could make the list way longer... WE WON'T FIND OUT ANYMORE... but in the end the crust will switch to scars... sadly there will be no way around... keep it clean and let it heal... If it does not get better in the next few days, you can get cortisone ointment from the pharmacy. BUT! THE GOOD THING! it can be reworked once the healing is over and the scars are settled down... so you should give it minimum half a year but as i said -IT CAN BE REPAIRED!! For the next time you should consult an artist who is into blackouts sadly can't post images, so i can't show you how your scars will be looking and how it is looks after reworking a blackout... So here we go... the first picture will be show how a healed overworked blackout looks like... second/third was around 3 month after reworking by me...
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