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Showing content with the highest reputation on 08/01/2013 in all areas
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Latest tattoo lowdown.....
el twe and 8 others reacted to slayer9019 for a topic
It ain't done yet but it's moving along... Matt Van Cura @ Invisible NYC9 points -
This is a portrait of my pops that I had done last week by Juan Arreguin (El Super) in his shop Superfly Tattoo here in Leon Guanajuato Mexico. If any of you are from Vancouver, you might recognize the name because he used to work at Rain City. August 12th is my fathers birthday, and the National Airborne Day is August 16th. Figured this would be a good way to honor him.9 points
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Your overall look as a tattooed person
petiloi and 5 others reacted to CultExciter for a topic
I just like getting tattooed.6 points -
I'm going to second this. I used to have ideas of how things were going to go together, and I still kind of have rough ideas and plans, but mostly when it comes down to picking a design and placement I'm all about spur of the moment decisions. I figure that it's all going to end up as one tattoo more or less anyway so I don't stress out about it.4 points
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You know your an LST member when....
Shaun1105 and 3 others reacted to slayer9019 for a topic
The code is "squidpants"4 points -
I get free samples of dog food donated to me from my local feed store and then when I see homeless people with dogs asking for help, I give them food for their dog.4 points
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Pic of Mike Wilson.....with flash sheet containing my first tatttoo.
daveborjes and 3 others reacted to kylegrey for a topic
The sheet on the left I'm pretty sure is by Tony Polito , I've seen a split Polito / Krak flash sheets that they sold at one point which may be the other sheet or both .4 points -
Your overall look as a tattooed person
Amok and 2 others reacted to peterpoose for a topic
Far too much thinking going on here :)3 points -
Finally took the plunge.
daveborjes and 2 others reacted to JustDave for a topic
Hi all. Pretty sure you can guess my name, but just in case....... I am Dave, currently in Nottingham UK. Signed up here ages ago, but for some reason never got around to posting. Got my first tattoo over 20 years ago (rubbish), then started getting ink again around 3 - 4 years ago. Have got work from Gray Silva and Rachael Huntington both @ Rampant Ink Nottingham, Yayzus @ Voodoo Boston Lincolnshire, Mark Boyle @ Nothing Sacred tattoo Stockton-on-Tees and my most recent piece by Ben "Mr. Benjamin" Stone @ Lifetime Derby. Always on the lookout for new artists to add to my collection as time and $$$ allows. Hope to contribute instead of lurking now. Cheers.3 points -
Anyone have any good ideas for a cover up?
Delicious and 2 others reacted to cltattooing for a topic
climbing panther forever!3 points -
I was browsing Mike Wilson's Instagram and happened upon this photo. My very first tattoo is seen on the flash sheet right between the two gentlemen's heads. It is the little rose and dagger design on the far left side of the sheet on the right. Maybe no big deal but I got really excited when I saw it because I haven't seen that exact design anywhere since I picked it off the wall back in '83. Nor have I seen the original design since I got my tattoo refurbished and added to a few years later. I never knew whether or not it was just from a generic flash sheet or if it was my tattoers take on an old design or what. Nor do I recall if that's the same sheet I picked from years ago. I knew I wanted a dagger and once I saw it, that's ALL I saw hahaha..... I believe the caption said the picture was taken at Smith Street. If so, I imagine it's a hand painted sheet by one the guys there but, maybe not. I haven't been lucky enough to visit those fine folks quite yet. Does anyone out there recognize this sheet or know anything about its origins? I would love to purchase a print of this sheet. Thanks :)3 points
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You know your an LST member when....
else and 2 others reacted to slayer9019 for a topic
Do what I did the last time I met an LSTer, look for familiar tattoos!3 points -
If their last words were, "Teddy Roosevelt, sex machine." Then that would be awesome.3 points
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I may be in SF during your time there. If you guys plan a get together let me know!3 points
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Old tattoo photos
el twe and 2 others reacted to smiling.politely for a topic
This one is on a guy who came in to get some family crests on his forearms. Last time he got tattooed was just after boot camp in San Diego, about 40 years ago. He couldn't remember who did it, but said that it was drawn on with a ballpoint pen. He had the lettering added a few weeks after the main image.3 points -
For those who are not necessarily going for full-body coverage, do you ever think about the overall look you have as a tattooed person? Like I imagine many people here, I am an appreciator of aesthetics, and when I consider getting new work done, I think long and hard about where to put it and how it will change the way my body looks in clothes, out of clothes, in swim suits, etc. It might be slightly different for females since we tend to have more variety in the clothes we wear (different cuts, lengths, dresses, etc.), but I do wonder... Do you pay a lot of attention to keeping your work balanced on your body? Do you take into consideration places on your body where you don't plan to ever get work? I guess one approach would be to prioritize the design, and pick the place on your body where that design fits best. Another approach would be to think about where you'd like to have tattoos, and pick designs you like that would flow well in those spaces. This post is partially inspired by this thread about negative space with tattoos. I am a huge fan of negative space and have spent a lot of time thinking about the best way and location to place substantial tattoos on my body, with space in between them. Some people might say this is overthinking it, but I can't help it, ha. I've considered putting most of my work on my left arm and right leg, leaving the opposites mostly clear. I've also considered mainly tattooing my torso and leaving my limbs mostly clear. When you think about it, following each of those two patterns would make for a really different overall look. Maybe as a still-kinda-newbie to this world, I do think about this stuff too much, but I'm still curious as to others' thoughts :)2 points
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Your overall look as a tattooed person
gougetheeyes and one other reacted to ironchef for a topic
I'm with @Cork in that balance was a huge consideration. Started with a half sleeve which then was made into a 3/4 sleeve on my left arm. In my mind, had to 3/4 sleeve my right arm as well and from there went below the waist to my left thigh, then began a shoulder to back of knees back piece. Eventually will get a piece on the right thigh to balance out the left. Hadn't planned on anything for my chest/stomach area and chatting with an artist about a calf sleeve but it's just a thought for the moment. My motif is Japanese, strictly animals/creatures and florals. As much as I love them, won't consider any gods or demons for superstitious reason in which I addressed in a separate thread on the forum. Placement was a big consideration for the subject matter.2 points -
Your overall look as a tattooed person
gougetheeyes and one other reacted to Cork for a topic
Balance was foremost in my mind since the beginning. I'm a huge fan of the full Japanese styles, and body placement is a HUGE deal. I kind of started on my back piece sooner than I thought I would be able to, but it was definitely in my head as to what would go where, and how I would tie it all together once the back piece was in place. I never thought I'd be one to get a suit, but I think it would just look weird with empty space between my tattoos ;)2 points -
Your overall look as a tattooed person
CaptCanada and one other reacted to Tight-Lines for a topic
I am still mostly torso coverage as well, and am still working on it. I have never been big on forearm tattoos and do not plan on getting any... So I'll just cover the rest of my body. I wont start showing off until I decide on a back piece... then ill just walk around with my shirt off all the time.2 points -
Your overall look as a tattooed person
missmaralaena and one other reacted to HaydenRose for a topic
I always think carefully about where to place tattoos, but I pretty much take it one tattoo at a time. Except I know my right arm is going to be an assortment of tattoos where my left arm I'd like to do a more cohesive thing (I'm trying to avoid the word "sleeve"... Lol). With my thigh piece I just had done it would probably have balanced out my other tattoos better if I put it on my left leg, but for some reason I just felt it was *destined* to go on my right, like it was difficult to imagine it on the left. Very strange... I don't think worrying about placement or planning ahead is over thinking. Tattoos are permanent, so it matters a great deal where they go.2 points -
I second this motion. All those in favour say "I"2 points
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Hello from Mexico
daveborjes and one other reacted to Graeme for a topic
Really nice tattoos and welcome. That portrait of your dad is especially cool.2 points -
Upcoming Tattoos
SStu and one other reacted to Killercook76 for a topic
Wow sounds like an amazing few months!! I know the feeling waiting for an appointment with Chris Garver and finally coming true. Next week I'm flying out to Cali to get a tattoo from Tim Hendricks. I've been emailing him for about a year now and finally secured an appointment! I decided on a good vs evil. Girl head ,skull, and some red roses. Can't wait!!2 points -
It's going to be a healin' kinda late summer and on into an itchy early fall. Tomorrow I have a long-awaited appointment with Chris Garver for a punk rock pinup. At the end of August, Ashley Love at New York Adorned is giving me a mermaid and anchor. On an as-yet undetermined day in September I will be getting a dagger from Steve Bolt at Smith Street. October 5, my back is finally getting shaded by Darren Rosa of Rising Dragon. One month later, I return to Mina Aoki at Fun City for the second of three ladies she is doing on my right bicep & shoulder. Hopefully she'll be able to do the third and complete the half sleeve by the new year. I need to buy some stock in Eucerin.2 points
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Latest tattoo lowdown.....
Kingdomhearts25 and one other reacted to kimkong for a topic
got a nice souvenir from stuart cripwell a few days ago...its my favourite shop in the whole world now!2 points -
Book thread
Delicious and one other reacted to HaydenRose for a topic
I finished A Dance with Dragons yesterday.... :( Time to peruse this thread for my next reading adventure!2 points -
I used to be an active Hasher (Hash House Harrier - you know, that drinking group with a running problem), and that's exactly how they communicate in a crowd of strangers. If any one of them is searching out like compatriots they say or yell out "Are you?" and the responding party responds with "On-On!". Maybe when in a group of the finely tattooed we need to loudly work the words "Last Sparrow" into our conversation and see whose ears perk up . . .2 points
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I'd been thinking about getting a compass tattoo for a while and took the opportunity to do so last week, the day after I arrived back in Buffalo/Niagara Falls, NY to visit family and friends. Done by Chuck, who owns Faith in Ink tattoo shop n the very arty Allentown district in Buffalo. Great guy and he really bent over backwards to help me find a time we could meet for the ink session. - - - Updated - - - Funny...this was a 5X year anniversary of my class's high school graduation. No organized reunion but I met some old high school friends for pizza & beer. At one point, my buddy Steve suggested that I deserved an award for being the person with the most tattoos. I asked how many others had one or some. None did. So yeah, I win. :cool:2 points
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Hello From Massachusetts!
Brenner reacted to cltattooing for a topic
@Brenner ERRRMAHGERRRRDDD TOO CUTE !!!!!!!!1 point -
1 point
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Los Angeles and San Francisco LSTers
Iwar reacted to slayer9019 for a topic
Looks like I am a go! Just figuring out how long I want to stay for and then just get the OK from work to take off. We gotta get @gougetheeyes out here too!1 point -
Well it's only relatively recently that I've tried to finish things out, I used to always think the grass was greener and be switching things up. But this year I have really tried to get into my head that consistently following a programme to some kind of finish, even if it's flawed in some way, is going to offer the best chance of progress.1 point
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Chris- Yep, still training. After the 40 Day programming I have been doing hypertrophy stuff since. Spent a fun month doing an old school Dave Draper full body routine, then a 6 day 'fat burner' from him. Did a sample week of German Volume Training, took a week off for honeymoon and now I'm at the end of my first 5 day GVT cycle (5 more to come). Day 1- chest / back - bench 10x10, row 10x10, 3x10 of two assistance exercises Day 2 - legs/abs- front squat 10x10, lying leg curl 10x10, 3x10 leg raises, calf raises Day 3, rest Day 4 arms/shoulders- biceps and triceps, 10x10, assistance work on shoulders Day 5 rest Etc. The DOMs from the front squats is crippling. I think that I'm probably too weak to really benefit optimally from GVT but I'm going to finish it out and then do another Draper routine, but an upper / lower split. 4 days in 7, nice variety of free weights and some machine work. At the moment I'm loving the higher rep work and shortish rest periods of all this type of training.1 point
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That's very nice, @kimkong! And yes, Spider Murphy's is an amazing little shop.1 point
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Upcoming Tattoos
cltattooing reacted to chrisnoluck for a topic
My girlfriend and I are going to be staying in SF near the airport somewhere I believe. We're renting a car and going straight to Spider Murphys in San Rafael as soon as we land to get tattooed by Stuart. Then the next day we're going back to San Rafael to get tattooed by Alex Graham at Lucky Drive. I tried getting an appt with Freddy but unfortunately I was too late and he was already booked up for the time we will be there.1 point -
Here is an example of what red and blue might look like on darker skin: Tattoo by JoJo Ackermann (linked to his instagram) fyi incase you are at work... the picture is of a full female back piece so it includes lady butt1 point
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You know your an LST member when....
Duffa reacted to Brock Varty for a topic
Yes, yes(as I stroke my meager beard), you may be on to something here.1 point -
Finally took the plunge.
slayer9019 reacted to hogg for a topic
Very cool tattoo--thanks for sharing!1 point -
I should be in la the same time. I moved back to Seattle from there but gotta get some more work from Bryan. I was shooting for around the 20th1 point
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@Iwar I'm getting Fujin on my chest with some other background stuff to tie in with my backpiece.1 point
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Los Angeles and San Francisco LSTers
Iwar reacted to Avery Taylor for a topic
I lived about a block away from where Dark Horse is now located. I really loved that area when I lived there, but that was thirteen years ago. I am sure it has changed a little, but I think most of my old hangout spots are still around. They are all bars so if you are not a drinker then this list will be useless to you. Sorry about that. All of them should be walking distance from where you are staying, and that is a hard thing to find in LA. Here goes: Good Luck Bar, The Dresden Room, Tiki Ti, Ye Rustic Inn, and last but definitely not least Jumbo's Clown Room. Jumbo's is a strip club. I do not know nor have I ever spent much time in strip clubs. Jumbo's is less of a strip club and more of an Los Angeles style roadhouse, and a legendary piece of Hollywood. If you decide to venture out into other neighborhoods I recommend The Prince in Koreatown, and Jones in Hollywood. I hope this helps.1 point -
1st Tat
daveborjes reacted to Brock Varty for a topic
Im sure your "tatted up" buddy has better knowledge than the person who tattooed you right? He would probably know more about how a tattoo heals than someone who actually tattoos. Seriously guy, the person with the answers you needed gave you the correct answer and because you didn't like the answer, you ignored it. When you only listen to the things you want to hear, you miss the things you need to hear.1 point -
@ian and I will be hanging out in SF September 18-22, and we both have appointments with Grime. Ian's doing another session on his back the 19th, and I will be starting mine with two back to back appointments the 20th and 21st. Holler at us if you want to grab a beer or something!1 point
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General Movie Thread
Duffa reacted to Tight-Lines for a topic
There was a fish.. in the percolator!!!1 point -
General Movie Thread
semele reacted to Tight-Lines for a topic
I've watched Twin Peaks about 6 times. Yes.1 point -
Face tatty's like whoa
spookysproul reacted to el twe for a topic
I know this is the Bad Tattoo sub-forum, but let's all take a moment to remember how fucking cool Freddy Corbin's face tattoos are.1 point -
Do we really need apprentices?
rozone reacted to Avery Taylor for a topic
Tattoo Zeke Owen’s Column ASK ZEKE WITH ZEKE OWEN This one’s from the legendary tattoo artist dates back to May 1998. Dear Zeke: I want to pursue a career as a tattoo artist very seriously. I am currently an aspiring artist with no tattoo training. How do I go about it? —Chris Sisler, Vacaville, CA Dear Chris: I’d like you to know, Chris, that my editor goes through all this mail out in California, picks out the things he wants and sends them to me. So I don’t have a lot of choice with really picking out my mail and the questions that I’d like to talk about. In other words, it’s just random and I don’t say, “I don’t want to answer this, I don’t want to answer that.” I say, “Oh there’s a juicy one,” and go on. I just have to take the ones that he sends. First of all, I’d like to tell you a little story about something that happened to me up in Seattle, Washington, one time. And I might start this little story out with a caption that went, “So you want to be a tattoo artist?” By the way, did you see in local business magazine that tattooing is now the sixth largest growing business in the United States?! Well anyway, next to my shop—my shop was on Skid Road. Skid Road was named originally as the logging road way back in the 1800s when they used to skid the logs down the road to Peugeot Sound to put on the ships. Well, anyway, I was out on First Avenue in Seattle for a little while and it was really neat. One of the coolest things that I used to see up there was that the people from Alaska and all over up north used to come down and put their money in the bank and go to the poker rooms and live in the old, beat up, stinky, I mean really stinky hotels right down there on First near the Pike Place Market and Skid Road. And this one guy used to bring down, every year, a couple of typical sled dog looking dogs and they were probably three years old or right around there. And he’d stay in one of those Skid Road hotel rooms where they let you have anything—I mean anything. And in the morning, you’d see the dogs and this guy from the Arctic Circle or someplace, down on the sidewalk and the dogs would both have collars on and each collar would be attached to the other one, kind of like Siamese-twin collars. So, consequently, he’d have one dog on the port side and one dog on the starboard side and they’d both be leaning in about ten degrees against each other and that’s they way he’d walk. Man, it’d be funny right there at the beginning of winter. They’d be falling, a struggling and a pulling. But, after a while, after a few months, winter would start winding down and they’d go down the steps and outside on the sidewalk just in unison—just as happy as they could be, with their tongues hanging out. And they’d run down the street when he’d call them. It looked like he was training them for sled dog work, but I’d never seen that before. It was really strange to watch them. Next door to my tattoo shop in Seattle was this old bar called the Forty Niner Tavern. And that’s exactly what it was. It was full of all them off the ships and miners. Honest to God they still have mines up there, of course they’d be there for the winter. And Seattle was kind of growing in those days, they were building all over the place, so we had a lot of steelworkers. And the tavern used to open up at six in the morning, and I know that because one of the opening bartenders used to be my girlfriend, Carol. And I’d be over at the arcade—it was open 24 hours a day with a pool hall, and the little guy who ran the grill—and I’d get her home fries and scrambled eggs and coffee and go over to the bar at six in the morning. And the place would be so smoky from cigarettes, it’d be the middle of winter and there was no movement of air in there, and the fire would be going and it was just thick with smoke. And the sun would make rays through the front door and the first few tables had a spotlight like one of the helicopters that flies over the lakefront when you’re out there barbecuing and partying. Anyway, I was in there and it was packed with all the steelworkers in there partying and doing shooters before they went to work up 20, 30 stories. They’re as drunk as hell going off to hang steel up there. Somebody ought to write a book, if they haven’t already, about how these guys used to save each other’s lives from falling to their deaths by catching them on the floor underneath. Anyway, I was sitting there drinking my coffee and I’d just finished my scrambled eggs and home fries when all of the sudden the most horrible, putrefying smell came into the place. God it was horrible, you know? And I looked around. I once had tattooed a South Korean Sailor for two gallons of kimchee because he didn’t have any money—this was back in the 60s—and he brought me this two gallon can of kimchee and I tattooed him and he went back to the ship. I had zero communication with the guy. So I put the bucket of kimchee—after taking out about a quart size jar of it—and put it in the reefer box in the Forty Niner Tavern and we were looking in there. We thought that was it, because it can get pretty foul sometimes. But that wasn’t it. And I looked up toward the front of the bar, and in the middle of this blazing sunlight cutting through the cigarette smoke here sits this old wino. He has a Korean War era watchcap in a shade of green that was particular to that era with flaps hanging down over his ears. And he had two or three suits on underneath his big overcoat, because it was below zero degrees outside. And his hands were just—you couldn’t tell what they were because the guy was so grimy. He had on big, heavy army wool pants and I looked down and I could see steam coming off his right boot, this old army boot. And the guy’s face was leathered and beat up. And he had his hand wrapped around a double shot glass of some kind of wine or something. With the sunlight on him, he’s just sitting there with head down—he’s drunk about half of it. And the steam coming off his shoe was coming off a freshly laid turd. Somehow, before he had sat down, he had crapped in his pants and his turd about the size of a scoop of vanilla ice cream had slid down his pants and landed on the toe of his shoe. Just balanced there. And the stink was just ripe. It was horrible. And the funny part was I was only one who got nauseous—ready to get sick over it. The rest of the seamen that were in there—a couple of guys from the hotel, a couple of Indians, all these steelworkers, my girlfriend Carol behind the bar—when I pointed it out they said, “My God, there it is, it’s on his shoe!” They all turned and broke into a rolling laugh, but they weren’t sick. It didn’t bother them a bit. They thought it was funny as hell. Well, I didn’t think it was very damn funny. So I went over to the guy and I told him, I said, “You’re gonna have to get up and leave this place and take that fucking thing on your shoe with you! Get outa here!” Anyway, he drank his wine, got up and walked out the door real slow, with his head bent down. Poor guy, he looked like a refugee from WWII, with that shuffle, like those guys with the tattoos on their arms, given that number from Hitler. Out the door he went, and that stinking thing on the toe of his right boot. But you know, that’s all part of life of being in a tattoo business. So I thought about that for many, many years. And there’s not a real point to all this that I’m telling you. But before you do anything—before you go about planning a big career move into the tattoo business—you really ought to find out more about what it’s all about. Where you want to go, what you really want to do with it. I mean, do you have any tattoos? In other words, before I give you directions to build a bomb you better know what the hell you want to do with the damn thing after you get it finished. Because most of the people who got into this business have a real kinship with their customers in that it really gets into their blood, so to speak, and you keep coming back for more. They stay in it. And I’ve seen real good tattooers just go nuts. Actually, one of Mike Malone’s that came in my shop, what was his name—from Germany—Freddy or something. Anyway, he went back to Germany and he was one of the very first ones on the crack of the wave of the tattoo scene and he took Germany by storm. It was 24 hours a day and it got to him so bad that he had a breakdown and went off to the hospital. And I haven’t heard anything from him since. Mike will know what I’m talking about. But the point of it is I can tell you right now, don’t take it on your own to try and do this or experiment with anybody. And here I am telling you exactly what I did, and a lot of others did, experimenting on their own. I can’t say it’s a mistake but it’s just a better approach to go into a shop of maybe the guys who’ve been doing your tattoos. I’m sure you have a bunch, right? And talk to them. Bring your artwork in to show. I’ll tell you what, there’s been a phenomenon in this business that went right past me. I missed it. Only just now am I getting to find out about what’s going on. I call them entrepreneurs. They have a job with the transit system or maybe they’re in the bricklaying business in the daytime and they have ten or fifteen tattoos, so now they decide they’re going to have a tattoo shop. They go down to Ocean Boulevard in Jacksonville, Florida, and they rent a little store. They put an ad in the paper and they hire six or seven guys and they give them 35% of the gross to sit in there and tattoo. But if they don’t have the equipment, by God, they send off to somebody up north and buy all the machines and the designs and the tools to do the work with. And that’s one way to do it. And they just get together like a big Chinese cluster-fuck and sit there and mark each other up and everybody else that comes in the place. But that’s one approach, I suppose. I think it’d be better off though if you did find somebody who had a reputation and they would sit you down and let you watch and talk. That’s really the way to get started. Hand to hand—kind of like the old-fashioned apprenticeships used to be at the shoe repair shop. After about a year, they eventually let you put a heel on somebody’s boot, you know? And also, this is another kind of business where you want to get next to the best person you can. If you have some serious art abilities or training and everybody goes “oooh” and “aaah” when they see your painting, then evidently you’ve got the kind of ability that you need today to succeed in the business. Most of the old time guys are what we call mechanics—take a pattern, slap it on your arm and follow it along. There were some guys that could make it look like Rembrandt. You could tell, it was sort of a mechanical follow-the-dots sort of a deal. But today, when you’ve got so many great people, it just blows me away. I never knew Brian Everett was an oil painter or a portrait artist before he got into this. I just didn’t stop to think like that. The scope of the way I thought was pretty much limited to the tattoo community that I developed myself in. And it didn’t include people like that. And today Mike Malone says I’m the last guy to find out anything. I don’t know—he’s probably right. But today I’m beginning to find out these people in fine arts are getting into tattooing. I’m beginning to think, is there more money working in tattooing than there is working in the art department at some big magazine? And evidently some of them actually like tattooing. So then again, you have to think very carefully about what you say or what you do around this or any other business. But especially in tattooing, because most of the people who are in tattooing are pretty down to earth. There’s not a lot of fiction in tattooing like a lot of people would think. When a guy comes in and you work on him two or three hours and he gets up and runs out the door with your money, that’s pretty real. It’s not a real good example either but—also I don’t just sit there when I’m tattooing somebody. I’ve got something to say. I ask them what’s going on and you get to hear a lot of what’s really happening in the rest of the world. The kind of people I work on are everything from deep sea divers to CEOs of major corporations. But again, you need to learn or find out more about what tattooing’s all about before you decide I’m an artist and I want to be a tattoo artist. Find out something about it first. Go to a tattoo convention. There you go. Hang out with all those drunks after the tattoo room is closed and they’re all in the bar slinging shit at each other, wrestling around in the parking lot like Bob Shaw and I used to do, drunk as hell in the grease. Things like that. Then that’ll give you more of an insight and whether you really want to be a tattoo artist or not. See ya. —Zeke.1 point -
Lifting Thread;training for the tattooed warrior.
MadeIndelible reacted to Tight-Lines for a topic
Im all about my GORUCK training right now. Running 6-8 miles with 4-5 bricks in my bag then doing push-ups, pull ups, sit ups, flutters, Burpees, bear crawls... and drinking beer for good measure.1 point