26 Ağustos 2011 Cuma

Lip Tattoos






This falls into the same category as henna tattoos, temporary tattoos, and fake tattoo sleeves. Temporary fashion fun. These temporary tattooed lips are for cool and can get you some attention. I like the patterns and colors they’ve come up with. It gives you a pretty dramatic look and I love the high glossy finish some of the patterns have.




To me it looks like they may a bit of a hassle to apply but I’m not really into spending major time getting decked out to go anywhere. Then I’m wondering – what happens when you eat or drink? Do you have to be worried about messing up the lips by getting them wet? Worry about smearing? And then how are they removed? Well worth the price to give it a shot if it strikes your fancy. For under $15 you get 3 tattoo application.




The company that carries the product is called Violent Lips. They have a video on YouTube that explains the whole process of applying them.





Tattoo Statistics






While perusing Google's new Google Scholar, which searches the dark web and helps you find academic works and research papers, I found some very interesting tattoo related articles.




One article in particular caught my eye.




Tattoos and body piercings in the United States: A national data set, written by Anne E. Laumann, MBChB, MRCP (damn that's a lot of letters) and Amy J. Derick, MD. In the report they explain how the participants were chosen and statistics were computed. The report is only nine pages, but I went ahead and pulled out some of the more interesting numbers:







  • 24% of respondents have Tattoo's -- 22% Women, 26% Men



  • 14% of respondents have Body Piercings



  • 37% of respondents have had military experience



  • 58% of respondents have spent >= 3 days in jail



Here are some of their juicier conclusions:







  • At all levels of education, the prevalence of tattoos was significantly higher among those of lower education.






  • Of those with tattoos, 76% had been in jail for 3 days or more multiple tattoos.






  • Recreational drug use was significantly more common among the tattooed.






  • Â Body piercing varies little by educational status. However, as with tattooing, body piercing occurs more among those who partake in risky activities such as heavy drinking, drug taking, and actions that lead to incarceration.



I've hung out at enough tattoo studios, so the conclusions did not surprise me, but this fact did:




"We found no difference in tattoo prevalence between ethnic groups with presumably all gradation of skin color, except that tattoos were twice as common among those with Hispanic ancestry than all other ethnic groups combined. Presumably permanently decorating the skin is a fashion or a cultural practice rather than appearance driven."







This could be a holdover of past cultural ties to earlier non western tattoo methods, which is an interesting sociological observation, but one for another day.





Disney Characters with Tattoos






The artwork that’s affiliated with Disney movies and books has always been highly respected in the art world. The stories are classics and the artwork is superior. And now we have an artist by the name of Tim Shumate who has combined some of the endearing female Disney characters with body art. Outstanding idea! Tim combined the likes of Ariel, Sleeping Beauty, and Princess Jasmine with a more adult costume and tons of tattoos. Here’s his Sleeping Beauty.




You can see more of Shumate’s work on his website. His work ranges from portrait realism to cartoon like subjects. Although he chooses to paint and draw subjects that are frivolous by nature, his talent takes the subjects he paints to a seriously talented level.


Best And Worst Places To Get A Tattoo






The question that I get most often from people who do not have tattoo’s is, “Does it hurt?” and the answer to that question is, “Yes.” Then their follow up question will be, “What does it fee like?” Of course the answer will probably differ from person to person but the best way I can describe it is, it feels like you are getting stung by hundreds of bees at the same time.




So if you are interested in getting a tattoo, please know that getting a tattoo on your body is going to hurt, but there are definitely more and less painful places on your body you could get on. So this leads me to inform you on the most and least painful places on your body to get a tattoo. Please keep in mind every person differs from pain levels, this is just a general consensus.




Most Painful
1. The ankles or top of your feet




2. Eyebrows




3. Chest or rib cage




4. Your private areas




5. The elbow




6. Eyelids




7. Knuckles




8. Spine




Least Painful




1. Shoulder




2. Thigh




3. Butt




4. Upper Arm




If I didn’t list a particular part of your body you are interested in knowing about, just keep this in mind. The more boney and less fatty an area on your body is the more painful that tattoo is going to be, due to the fact that there is nothing there to help take the pain expect for your nerves and skin.





How Tattoos Work






One might ask themselves how in the world does a tattoo stay on your skin forever? I mean, I’m pretty sure that most people are aware that we as human shed are skin all the time. So one might wonder how does the ink from our tattoos never fall off as well. Well in this post I will explain the whole process of how and why tattoos stay on our skin forever.




First you should know that a tattoo needle punctures you skin up to 50 to 3,00 times a minute when getting a tattoo. The tattoo needle punctures the cells of the dermis which is the second layer of the skin. Our skin consists of three layers: the epidermis, dermis and subcutaneous tissues. The epidermis, is the outer layer of skin that acts as a protective barrier and contains no blood vessels. Below the epidermis, is a thicker layer called dermis and that is where tattoos go.




Since we as humans are constatlly sheding the top layer of our epidermis, tattoo artists push ink through the epidermis and leave it in the dermis. The dermis pretty much stays the same throughtout our lifetime, hince the reason why tattoos are so permanant.




However, there is a science to tattooing, you have to be extra cautious that you only penetrate the skin 1.5 mm. If you go any further than that you will reach the subcutaneous layer and you don’t want to do this. It will more than likely be extra painful, bleed more and your tattoo will end up being blurry. Of course there are places on your body that need to be penetrated deeper and other places that don’t need to be penetrated as deep. A skilled tattoo artist knows the depths and boundaries on how far to penetrate your skin.





New Tattoo Ink Makes Removal Easier






There has been some controversy over this new tattoo ink that has come out. The new tattoo ink has been out since the fall of 2007 but some people are claiming that the ink doesn’t do what everyone claims it does. This new ink is permanent as well as removable. It is made by storing dye in microscopic capsules that will stay in the skin for good. But if you wake up one day and decide you no longer want your tattoo or regret it one day, it can simply be zapped away with a single laser treatment that is simpler and less painful than the barrage of treatments now needed.




People are now coming forward who have gotten a tattoo with this new “removable” ink and are saying the removal process isn’t as easy as the makers of this new ink are saying. For instance they state you will only have to under go one laser tattoo removal session. Well real life people are auguring that it takes six sessions just like it would with the old traditional ink.




The bottom line is people are missing the whole point about getting a tattoo. A tattoo is meant to be permanent and be with you the rest of your life. If you feel you won’t be able to live with a tattoo for the rest of your life, simply don’t get one. Don’t rely on a new ink method to save you. The cost of laser tattoo removal is far more expensive than getting a tattoo and it is pretty much guaranteed even with this new tattoo ink that you will have to under go multiple sessions to get rid of your tattoo. Not only does this new ink cost considerably more than your traditional tattoo ink, but if you decide you don’t want this tattoo anymore you will have to shell out even more money to get it removed. Simply put think before you ink. A tattoo is a life committment if you feel you can’t make it than you are not cut out to have a tattoo.





Tattoo Tips For First Timers






Deciding to get a tattoo is a fun and exciting decision in ones life, but you should also be aware of a few little things before you jump the shark and get inked. There are several tattoo tips out there and several people may give your different ones, but there a several general rule of thumb tattoo tips that every first timers should be educated on before going to the tattoo parlor or studio and getting inked.




Below are a few rule of thumb tips:




* First and foremost you want to be certain the tattoo parlor you choose has the proper sterilizing equipment like an autoclave. You also want to make sure they have bio-hazard container to dispose of bloody objects and needles.




* Make sure your tattoo artist is knowledgeable, well mannered and helpful. Some tattoo artist have attitudes and or quirky personalities if you are not comfortable with that, then simply find another tattoo artist.




* A good tattoo artist will be able to answer any question you may have about tattooing if they don’t know then they should be able to ask someone or find out for you.




* A good tattoo artist will also double check that you are satisfied with your tattoo design before the start tattooing it on you.




* A good tattoo artist will wear fresh disposable gloves, they open a new needle in front of you and they use fresh ink.




* The tattoo artist will provide you with clear and easy to follow aftercare instructions.





Tattoos No Longer A Boys Club






When tattoos first came about it was nearly unheard of for women to have them. Tattoos really started to thrive in the military. Sailors would dawn their bodies with tattoos to show where they had been, what part of the service they were in, and so on and so forth. However, for a women back in those times to have a tattoo they were just considered a freak. In fact the only women who had tattoos back in those times were women who where in the circus. Well years have passed and tattoos have come a very long way. Now men are not the only ones allowed to have some body art on their skin. It is safe to say that the same amount of women go out and get tattoos as men and if it’s the not the same it’s pretty close.




However, it seems that it is completely okay for a women to get a tattoo but it’s another story for a women to give a tattoo. There are quite a few women tattoo artists out there but not nearly as many as their are men. Could this be because men artist are making it difficult for them to get into the tattoo business or because less women are interested in becoming a tattoo artist? Whatever the reason is, women are still looked down upon more than men if they do have body art. Women are thought of as being these pure, innocent creatures and having a tattoo is just considered inappropriate . This is probably why more women than men have their tattoos removed and seem to have more regrets about their tattoos.





Don’t Be A Victim To Fad Tattoos

When one decides to get a tattoo is can be a hard decision, there are so many tattoo designs to pick from it is really hard to decide which one is for you and which one you fell you can live with for the rest of your life. This is why it is so very important to put a lot of thought to this decision. One of the worst things you can do is go out and get a fad tattoo. Fad tattoos are something that is really popular at the time you get them but don’t necessarily stand up to the test of time because like any fad they come and go. Since tattoos are permanent and you can’t just rub it off when you don’t want it anymore it’s best to pick a tattoo design that means something special to you and that you will never regret.


Believe it or not some people do get fad tattoos just for the sake of having them and don’t think about to repercussions later on down the road. For instance, Twilight exploded onto the bookshelves and now the big screen and it a very popular series. That doesn’t mean you should rush out a get a tattoo of Edward Cullen on your body. Unfortunately, a lot of people are doing this and in a few years when the hysteria of Twilight dies down these people will probably be asking themselves why they got these tattoos. Another big fad that is going on is people are getting tattoos of celebrities children, this is just plain ridiculous. These kids have nothing to do with you or your life so it is best to stay away from this fad.


The moral of the story is put some serious thought into your tattoo design don’t get something that is very popular now and won’t be a in a few years. It’s also wise to stay away from tattoos of celebrities. A lot of celebrities come and go and can’t last in Hollywood and you would feel really stupid if you had one of them tattooed on you.



Pain and Tattoo






















One of the first things that comes to someones mind when thinking about getting a tattoo is the pain involved with it.Unfortunately, getting a tattoo is painful, however, some places are more painful than others. Also the amount of pain that one experience also has to do with their level of pain tolerance. Everyone on the earth has a different pain tolerance, so one person may only experience a little bit of pain and discomfort, while someone else may experience a lot of pain and discomfort. So if you can’t handle pain too well than getting a tattoo is probably not the best thing for you.









However, there are more painful places on your body to receive a tattoo. If you are hell bent and determined to get a tattoo but are concerned about the pain than you should stay away from boney areas like, like your skull, spine, ribs elbow, sternum, etc. These areas are not only more painful but you will not only have to deal with the pain, but you will have to deal with these areas vibrating, which causes another unpleasant feeling. Also other areas that tend to be painful are the fleshy areas on ones body like the like the stomach, crotch area, inner thighs, under arm, and armpit. These places seem to cause a much more sharp pain and a pinching feeling.







If you can’t handle the pain and really want a tattoo than you should stick with areas that have more muscle mass to them like your arms or the back or your calve. Also keep in mind the state of mind you are in when you get your tattoo also can help contribute to how much pain you will be in. It is important to be clear headed, well rested and not emotional unstable.










No Swimming For Your New Tattoo






Contrary to belief there is a lot of knowledge that needs to be known when it comes to picking out a tattoo, getting a tattoo and taking care of a tattoo. Getting a tattoo is serious business and it is no walk in the park. You will most certainly experience some sort of pain and or discomfort when getting a tattoo and people need to be ware of this. Of course different people have different pain tolerance levels so the amount of pain you fell will be up to you. Also the location of the tattoo will also determine the pain level. However, the most important thing that one needs to know about getting a tattoo is how to take care of it properly, because just like a cut your tattoo can get infected.




One of the biggest no no’s when it comes to getting a tattoo is going swimming and or submerging your new tattoo in water. Many may think this isn’t a big deal but it is. But you should avoid hot tubs, swimming pools and soaking in bathtubs of water while your tattoo is healing. After all a tattoo is a surface wound on your skin and your skin is susceptible to infection and public pools and water are easy sources of bacteria. Thus, allowing unwanted bacteriainto your new tattoo, which will then cause an unwanted infection. Also if you are in water for a long period of time or soaking your tattoo in water it can cause the scab to come off the tattoo prematurelyl cause your tattoo not to heal properly. So keep in mind if you are planning on going to the beach or some other place where water activities will be involved refrain from getting a tattoo ahead of time or while you are on vacation.





What Should You Do With An Infected Tattoo






Hundreds of people get tattoos everyday and hundreds and thousands of people never have to deal with an infected tattoo. However, tattoos can get infected just as easily as anything else. This is why it is so important to properly care for your tattoo after you have gotten it. Don’t assume it will heal on its own without help from you. The most important thing about caring for a tattoo is making sure it is clean and staying away from water. You should not submerge your tattoo in water. When taking a shower its you should try your hardest to get your tattoo wet as little as possible. You should also put some kind of healing ointment on your tattoo at least twice a day. The most common healing ointments for tattoos are Bacitracin Zinc, A & D Ointment, Petroleum and Neosporin.




If you suspect that your tattoo maybe infected there is really one thing that you should do, go to your doctor. They will be able to treat and diagnose it. More often than not they will simply give you antibiotic and might take a blood test to be on the safe side. The tale tell signs of an infected tattoo are increased pain, swelling, redness, heat, or tenderness around the tattoo, red streaks extending from the area, pus coming from the wound, swollen or tender lymph nodes, and or a fever. Please note that when you first get a tattoo your skin will be red and tender and your tattoo may very well ooze some pus this is normal. However, if this should occur a few days after your tattoo, then it is pretty safe to bet it is infected and should be treated immediately. If you are not sure if your tattoo is infected and don’t want to spend the money seeing a doctor, revisit your tattoo artist and see if they can confirm the infection then head to the doctor.





Be In The Right Frame Of Mind When Getting A Tattoo






If you do your research about tattoos you will find that a lot of people state that you need to be in the right frame of mind before you go out and get inked. Getting tattooed is a very serious thing and should never be decided on the spur of the moment, those tattoos almost always end up being a regret or a “what the heck was I thinking” tattoo. If you don’t want to fall in that category than listen up.




First and foremost you should put some serious thought into making the decision to get a tattoo. Flying by the seat of your pants when it comes to getting ink isn’t a very good idea. Tattoos need to be thought out and researched. Secondly, you need to make sure you are in the right state of mind. Getting a tattoo because you are mad at someone and want to do something to rub in their face is no reason to get a tattoo. Moreover, you need to make sure you are alcohol and drug free, those two elements do not mix well when one is getting a tattoo. They can cause you to bleed more and cause the healing process to take longer or complications to occur during the healing process. Lastly, being in the right state of mind will help you be able to cope with the pain better. When you sit down to get your body art you should be well rested, in good health, and clear headed. It is also important not get a tattoo when you are depressed or having just experience something traumatic or life changing.





More Information On Foot Tattoos






Foot tattoos are becoming very popular amongst the females. It is probably safe to say that one of the most tattooed areas on a woman’s body is probably her lower back and her foot. For some reason women seem to be gravitating towards the foot tattoos. Not only do they look extremely sexy paired with a pair of heels but there is also have some sort mystique about them. Let’s face it some places on the body just look great with a tattoo on it and the foot is certainly one of those places.




However, there is a lot that one needs to know before heading out to the tattoo parlor to get a foot tattoo. First of all not all tattoo artist will tattoo feet. Some feel its a waste because they tend to fade more and the healing time is a little longer than other places on the body. Also it is best to get a foot tattoo in the spring or summer time, because you will need to wear flip flops or some sort of sandal that will not touch the tattoo while it is healing. Another tip that most people do not think about is having your dog or pet not step on your foot. You may not realize how often it happens in everyday life but it little Fido steps on your recently tattooed foot it is going to hurt really bad. Also you need to try and avoid them scratching your foot. This can led to an infection and will leave you tattoo with a big white mark. Furthermore you should be prepared of your foot swelling, try to keep it elevated when possible. Lastly, some people report that when their tattoo is healing that every time they take a step it cracks the scab in the tattoo and can cause some discomfort.





Tattoos for Diabetics






A recent development in the medical world has found a way to use tattoos to help diabetics monitor their blood sugar. People suffering with diabetes have to constantly be pricking their skin to test their blood throughout the day. A professor of pharmaceutical sciences at Northeastern University in Boston developed the tattoo monitor to help make life easier for the twenty-six million Americans that currently live with the disease.




The tattoo is only a few millimeters in size and is made up of nanosensors. These are tiny polymer beads that change color depending on the person’s glucose level. Unfortunately, the tattoo has to be applied weekly but it’s still better than sticking your finger multiple times a day to get a reading. The tattoo does not go as deep as professionally applied tats so it doesn’t hurt as much. It’s has to be applied to the 1st layer of skin to work correctly and it fades after about a week.




The patient just has to scan the tattoo with a handheld device to check the color of the beads. That’ll let them know what their blood sugar reading is.




The worst part is it has to go through about a decade of clinical trials before most diabetics will be able to use the tool. Seems kind of ridiculous for a non-narcotic treatment that can help so many people now.


23 Ağustos 2011 Salı

Ryan Philippe Showed Us His Tattoos













When Ryan Phillippe lifts up his shirt in the middle of the bar at SoHo's Crosby Street Hotel, it's surprising that no one faints. He is, after all, a movie starwith taut muscles, smooth, caramel-colored skin, and a chiseled, ready-for-my-close-up mug. To think that someone might walk by, catch a glimpse, and collapse in excitement is not out of the question. Surely it's happened before. But not today. Today everyone remains calm.




To be fair, it isn't as tawdry as it sounds, Ryan has lifted his shirt simply to show off his tattooan image of his son Deacon's hand gripping Ryan's grandfather's handfrom the beloved artist Mister Cartoon, Like his career, Ryan takes his tattoos very seriously. "It's really beautiful and soulful," the 35-year-old actor says. "I went in there with this idea, and Cartoon loved it. He's a soulful guy, and I have a connection with him that's personal, I was so excited because he's the top hip-hop artist, and I'm such a hip-hop head. He's literally done everybody ... Kanye West, Xzibit. You go into his studio and there's a picture of him tattooing Eminem's skull. It's sort of like a brotherhood. Cartoon said, 'You're part of the family now.' It's a cool family to be a part of. He's done three on me now."




Movie star Ryan Phillippe has brought his grandfather and his son together in a touching tattoo on his back. The "Crash" star's son Deacon never got to meet his great-grandfather - but Phillippe likes to think the "most impressive man I've ever met" still watches over his kids.

And he has a large tattoo on his right shoulder to acknowledge the family link. The actor says, "He (grandfather) passed away before my son, Deacon, was born and so that tattoo is his hand holding my son's because they never got to meet. It means so much to me."


For most people, Cartoon's waiting list is months long, but it helps if you're a famous actor who's appeared in more than 20 movies, including Flags of Our Fathers, Crash, 54, Cruel Intentions, and this month's MacGruber, a big-budget comedy based on Saturday Night L/Ve's popular MacGyver spoof.



Ryan's show business beginnings are the stuff of Hollywood legend: He was discovered as a teen while getting a haircut in a Delaware barbershop. Soon after, he was starring in the soap opera One Life to Live, as the first gay teen ever to appear on daytime television. It was a risky career moveone of many ballsy chances he would take over the next two decades. "I was shunned by the church after I did it," Ryan recalls. "Ostracized, in a way. It was a nerve-racking job at 17, when you're just kind of understanding your sexuality. I didn't know any gay people. I was nervous and insecure. The other actors were like, 'You've got to speak up.1 But it was an amazing learning experience. It grew me up."



At 19, while on location in England for his first big movie, White Squall, Ryan had another coming-of-age moment: He got his first tattoo. He takes a sip of his tequila cocktail and points to a Japanese character that stands for spirit or soul on his right arm.




"I went to this shady, dirty tattoo parlor because I wanted to commemorate my first major role," he says, smiling. "I grew up with no money or connections to the business. My family struggled, and finally I'd gotten to the place where I was making a film with Jeff Bridges. I felt like I'd arrived." Of his six tattoos, Ryan says his first is the most embarrassing. "It's kind of bleeding and looks like a butterfly. It's cliche. But I was 19it should have been a cliche."


So would he ever get it covered? "No, but I did have a ladybug on my foot covered up. Its significance was with an ex. I put a stingray over the top of it. When people ask me why, I say, 'Any animal that could take down the Croco­dile Hunter deserves my respect.'"



The ex?



"An ex," he says, looking uncomfortable.



You can't blame the guy for shifting in his seat. The ex in question is Reese Witherspoon, who Ryan was married to from 1999 to 2006 (they have two children, Ava, 10, and Deacon, 6). Theirs was a high-profile romance, and when they broke up, amid rumors of his alleged infidelity with his Stop-Loss costar Abbie Cornish, The Golden Couple's personal business was suddenly splashed all over the tabloids.

It was rough for Ryan, who was being put through the wringer in the press. Around that time, he asked Cartoon to change the blue cross tattoo on his leg into a sword with a Latin saying that means, essentially, "words cannot harm me." "I was in this place where I was tired of being talked shit about," Ryan says. "No one is perfect. Everyone makes mistakes. But I am a decent person. I got so sick of being told how shitty I was. I like the fact that it feels like I can just take [the sword] off my leg."


Unfortunately for him, the gossip rag chatter and Internet coverage didn't stop with his ex-wife: In February, Ryan was involved in a he said-she said breakup with the aforementioned Abbie Cornish, It was not a clean split: Her publicist released a statement that said she broke up with him and moved out of their Los Angeles home. The next day, his publicist released a statement that he broke up with her and asked her to move out,

Not wanting to reveal the details of their relationship, Ryan does offer some broad strokes: "Those things are tricky, man. In this business, it's like,love movies and I want to be an actor. That's where it begins and ends with me. Now I'm realizing, yeah, I've got to play the game a little bit more."


To that end, Ryan signed on to star in this spring's MacGruber, the first big-budget comedy of his career. The movie, starring SNL's Will Forte and Kristen Wiig, and helmed by The Lonely Island's Jorma Taccone, is a huge departure for Ryan, who has appeared in his share of downers. "MacGruber is to '80s action movies what Austin Powers was to Bond movies," he says. "When you do dramasand a lot of the movies I've been in, I wouldn't say they're, like, message movies or political movies, but the themes are heavy: racism, war, espionagethe mood pervades. If it's a dramatic scene, there's tension on set. This was the exact opposite, I would get there and laugh from morning until night. I was out of my element in a great way,"



22 Ağustos 2011 Pazartesi

LEAH JUNG With Amazing Tattoos














DH, THE ILLUSTRATED LIFE OF COLORFUL GIRL LEAH JUNG.







When we called on her for this photographic showcase, she said she'd come to us. "Please don't visit me," she pleaded. "Not because I don't like visitors, but because there's a vicious genital-eating squirrel that lives on my porch." Squirrels have their right to nuts, so the model-singer trav­eled from her hometown of Albany, NY, to New York City to show off her tattoos.







Being musically inclined, she felt right at home photographed in front of a wall of soundthe Marshall amps you see on the cover. "I absolutely love to sing," she says. "In a scrapbook, I have a picture I drew when I was 6. In crayon it says, 'When I grow up I want to be a singer,' and there's a blond stick figure on a stage with a microphone and an amplifier. I didn't even know what an amplifier was, I just knew there were box-things on stages. It just feels good to sing. That's what has always felt good to me."







She also feels good when being tattooed, just another outlet and release for her energy. But like many artists who got better with ageJohnny Cash, John Lennon, Tom Waits (we await yourangry letters of disagreement)she's decided that some of her youthful proclamations aren't as poi­gnant now that she's matured. For this reason Jung is lasering off some of her back tattoos to update her catalogue, "I would have been content leaving them as I originally wanted them. However, I would prefer a nice, big, beautiful back piece."







And when we start to protest: "Well, painter Paul Cezanne said, 'A work of art which did not begin in emotion is not art,' and I agree. My body is an expression of myself. If I'm not expressing myself, I get painfully bored."



Click for 49 photos of Leah Jung


http://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.167672186641060.43016.160329464041999&type=1


Zoe Jakes with Tattoos














When Zoe Jakes was starting out as a belly dancer, she made her living by dancing for Arabic and Persian groupscultures that traditionally don't approve of tattoos. "I had the girl on my back, but the rest of my body stayed untattooed because I needed to be able to work at restaurants, private parties, and weddings," she says. "The minute I started getting successful in more alternative stuff, that's when I just went for broke, because I love adornment. I love the way it makes the body look and changes when I dance."







The "alternative stuff" mainly means her Oakland, CA-based world-electronic trio, Beats Antique. A few years ago Jakes was in a few highly regarded belly dancing troupes when Miles Copeland, the producer of Bel-lydance Superstars (as well as former manager of The Police), approached her about making an album he could use for the upcoming belly dance tour. "I was sitting at the barI believe I was in Pittsburgh at the Rex [Theater]and I was drinking and hanging out with Miles and he said that he needed a Middle Eastern electronica album ... something fresh and new," she recalls. So, Jakes enlisted the help of friend and longtime musical collaborator Tommy "Sidecar" Cappel, as well as world musician David Satori, and they named the project Beats Antique. You can see their success marked by how much ink Jakes has acquired now that she no longer has to work conservative parties.








Since 2007, the trio has put out five albums (including 2010's Blind Threshold) and played every festival from Austin City Limits to SXSW to Lollapalooza. Behind the scenes, all three produce the music, and their live format involves Cappel and Satori manning the computer and instruments while Jakes belly dances onstage.







Jakes estimates that 90 percent of her live belly dancing is improvised and the other 10 percent is rehearsed. She explains: "I feel like that style works for me because I've had a huge hand in making the music. I know it so well that I don't have to think about it in a choreography kind of way. It's more that I'm so connected to the music that my body instinctively knows how to move to it."

Her ink includes a burlesque girl on her left side and a belly dancer on her right, as well as a key on the inside of her right forearm, a design on the inside of her elbow inspired by art deco circus posters, and a massive floral design on her midsection. "When it's done well, it's just so beautiful," Jakes says of tattoos. "I feel like it's an expression of my arts as much as dancing is."

About Michael Chernow










New York restaurateur Michael Chernow knew that dropping a late-night meatball joint into the mayhem of rock clubs and hipster dives on the Lower East Side would be a success... but perhaps not this much of a success.



"We pulled the paper off the windows and there were literally 150 people waiting outside," says Chernow from a table skirting the sidewalk of The Meat­ball Shop. That was February. Multiply the crowd by 10 and that's an aver­age weekend these days. The meatball idea evolved "out of nowhere," but the restaurant is exactly what Chernow pictured when he and co-owner Daniel Holzman schemed as kids to one day open a place of their own. Long before he wrote the all-meatball menu, Chernow wrote his life story in ink.



"It means 'strength and power,'" the native New Yorker explains, rotating his arm to show the Sanskrit text from a drunken trip down Hollywood Boulevard when he was 18. "I was in a bad place. I went through hell and back when I was young, and I needed to find some of both." As Chernow battled his way to sobriety, he added tributes to the people who inspired strength, first a horseshoe around his elbow in memory of his horse trainer father, and then a sleeve by Inborn's Ray Jerez. Three monkeys from a family statuesee no evil, hear no evil, speak no evilperch over a cascade of Mom's favorite orchids, crowned at the shoulder by an elephant his Buddhist grandmother credits to be good luck. And Chernow's wife, Donna, a model-cum-pastry chef responsible for the restaurant's killer ice cream sand­wiches, was the inspiration behind one of the two massive angels on his back and a spiritually significant phrase across his stomach.



"Every tattoo I have has a story behind it," says the extraordinarily grounded bartending vet and graduate of the French Culinary Institute. "But I have to schedule, like, five appointments at a time or else I'll be covered in ink." Good thing, because there's temptation. Troy Denning sometimes stops into The Meatball Shop three times a day, and the guys from Invisible NYC, Daredevil, and New York Adorned are all regulars. "I would love to trade meatballs for tat­toos," Chernow adds with a playful glint in his eyes, "but no one's taken me up on that yet." Wait 'til they try the spicy pork balls.


Juliet Simms














She's a young, fiery, sexy hybrid of Joan Jett and Juliette Lewis who says that she wants to model her career "after Janis Joplin, except without the drug addiction and dying when she is 27." She's Juliet Simms, the commanding fro n two man of the band Automatic Love letter,







Simms has been busy touring with the band's new album, Truth or Dare, getting ink, and playing music while others get tattooed. "All my tattoos are completely original," says Simms of her 1 7 pieces. "They are well thought-out and something I design and workout with the artist." When you have that many tattoos, your preferred pick often shifts. "I guess my favorite right now would be the black panther on my back," says Simms. "The meaning behind it is that it's clawing its way up my backI got it at a point of my life where I was clawing my way to the top, basically." Lyrics by The Beatles and Billy Joel as well as some of her own can also be found on parts of her body. Simms has found another way to combine her passion for music with her love for great body art. She and her band mate-brother, Tommy Simms, recently formed a partnership with Tampa Bay Ink for bands to play in the shop while people get tattooed. The idea is that live music can be part of the tattooing experience and can distract and soothe the senses while the needle is penetrating the skin, "We're starting this whole Ink Unplugged project where we get musicians to come to the shop and put on acoustic performances," says Simms.




Getting back to her own ink, the songstress doesn't exactly rule out a pos­sible 18thin fact, when asked if she had a slight addiction she responded: "Yes, definitely, but I am in control. I don't want to be that girl who is completely covered up. I think I am good for now. I'm not saying I won't get anotherbut I'm definitely taking a long minute before I go into my 18th tattoo." She may not want to fully cover her skin head to toe, but she does want to display what she has. "I actually cut up shirts in certain ways to show off my tattoos, especially my back tattoo," Simms says. "I do like showing them off. I like to be trendy and give little flashes of them. Even if you can't see the whole thing, you'll see enough so you know they're there."


19 Ağustos 2011 Cuma

Clay Decker - Tattoo Artist













JOSH HOMME: Most of what I know of your work is Japanese-influenced. Are the origins of tattooing Eastern?





CLAY DECKER: Well, it's a funny thing you men­tion that because a lot of people tend to feel that or think that, or think that it originated in the South Pacific. But the fact is that going back to the oldest remains of man found on the planet-Tattooing existed then? It's sort of a mystery as to when and where. But going way back, it's a fundamental artistic form of body expression in every culture.





You excel in the old Japanese style. Thank you.






□o you have a lot of training in it? Or is that just where your passion is? I think my intense curiosity for that facet of tattooingthat history-stems from the fact that I was raised in Hawaii and there was a lot of Japanese influence there. As a kid, my favorite superheroes were Japanese because we had an influx of that kind of stuff in Hawaii. So that initially got me very comfortable-It was just present. YesI was immersed in the culture. Then, for the first five or six years that I was tattooing, I never really lent much credibility to the Japanese stuff because I didn't really know anything about it. I was pretty much learning as I went, on my own terms. After my apprenticeship and in my initial stages of being a journeyman, I was still sorting out all the different styles I could use in my journey.





You were finding your area of expertise.





Yeah, And up until 1996, I didn't even have a passport and couldn't leave the country, so all the invitations I had to go overseasand I had a lot of 'emwere on hold until I was actually able to get a passport and go.





It seems that there's a more rigid rule, a little bit more structured apprenticeship or teaching method in Japan. Well, let's just sum it all up with: There's a way higher understanding of appreciation.





Did you have that same appreciation, that it needs to be taken seriously to develop that





kind of skill? Well, I can only speak for myself, and I feel that, yes, for me it took that personal understanding to really dig into my fundamental tattooing passion.





There's plenty of daisies tattooed on ankles, but that doesn't truly reflect the art form,





right? Well, let's just say that it is of a grander scale of fascination of the same medium. Out of all the cultures on the planet, speaking of tattoo tradi­tion, the Japanese one is the grandest for the most part. There are Polynesian bodysuits that go way back too, but as far as the grandest visual depic­tions of imagery and stuff that you can relate withactual illustrations, not just decorative stuffJapan and the Japanese history has it beat completely,





In America it used to be sailors and our types. But in Japan tattoos sort of seemed to span different socioeconomic classes, from the





rich man down to sailors. Ironically, it's always been that way here too. Going back, like, a hundred years ago, and before that even, in Europe a lot of royalty got tattooed. It was a sign of being cultured in a lot of respects. You know, they weren't flaunting it to the public by any means because that's how the class separation is maintained.





It seems like the flaunting of tattoos is a rela­tively new experience. It is.














In fact, the importance of keeping them to yourself, in a way, seems to have been more the case for a longer period of time. Yeah. Up





until the more recent past, the integration of cul­tures and the appreciation for other cultures and people in other, different parts of society was incredibly at bay. It wasn't until this most recent exploitation of tattooing in a global world that people became fascinated with each other's tat­toos. Every man, woman, child, black, white, green, purple, whatever, whatever religion, whoever you worshiptattooing is a human fascination and yet some people are still offended by it,





They find it taboo. Or people find it gross, or don't know how to deal with seeing them. Those who freak out are at the peak of fascination with tattoos. That's why their response is so extreme. But it's a human fundamental fascination. It's something that everybody wonders about: Someone making permanent marks of their own choice in an artistic medium, on their own body that stays forever. To some, it's a mysterious and bizarre thing.





Well, in that respect, there is very much a judging a book by its cover facet to it, where you're explaining something about yourself without speaking, you know? Absolutely.










Like even how I might judge a guy wearing Ed Hardy. It's a real shame, you know? Well, con­sidering what Ed Hardy did for tattooing, it is a real shame because Ed Hardy did extraordinary things





for tattooing. I would never, ever be able to, or want to, in any way take away the incredible, prolific, monumental things Ed Hardy has given to tattoo­ing. Now, can [we] candidly talk about that?





I'm not sure if that's a touchy subject or not.





Well, it's funny you say that because I have no problems separating my personal feelings from my reverence to him as a craftsman. I personally don't like Ed Hardy. We've had our differences and he doesn't like me either. But that has noth­ing to do with his body of work and what he's done for tattooing. Which is unparalleled in a lot of ways. For years everybody would be like, "Oh, Sailor Jerry's rolling over in his grave." "Sailor Jerry this and Sailor Jerry that." Man, Sailor Jerry is rolling over in his grave, fucking farting and going back to sleep after fucking seeing what's happening to Ed Hardy, you know? It's crazy.





What If ind fascinating on the merchandising of the Ed Hardy stuff is that it seems unreal com­pared to the tattooing. I mean, you're talking about understated, cool [art]. It's overstated versions of understated work. Yeah, absolutely.










Well, I guess there's a fine line between doing well and doing almost too well, which is kind of a tricky path to walk, you know? That all





depends on your definition of [doing well]. It's all subjective. I mean, I personally feel like I've done well. I don't own my own house. I don't even own my own car. I have no desire to attempt to own either at the moment, I mean, I'm sure that I could attain those things if I really focused on them, but they're not important to me.





But you shouldn't lose the reins on your awn art. You're doing tattoos of your artwDrk-





Well, I'm doing tattoos of other people's artwork tooor my translation of it into the medium,





But that must go through your filter, you





know? Absolutely. And it's up to my judgment and my abilities as to whether or not it's going to be delivered and leave a positive memory for someone, or a negative one. One negative tat­too experience can put people off into never get­ting tattooed again or even indulging in the topic socially. So consequently...





A negative tattoo has the same ripple effect as a positive one. Exactly. It has a way more powerful one. Like, 50 great tattoos can't redeem one horrible one. generation. It took me longer and harder for some reason. I think it was probably my own initial ego that kept me from getting better quicker, maybe in my first early years.





At least you have to be willing to admit when you're incorrect, so to speak. Yeah, and I was, like, 17 when I started my apprenticeship. And at that age, I had already been recognized as an artist amongst all my friends in the punk rock scene or whatever. I was young enough and dumb enough to really have an ego about it





You mean, as an apprentice you had an ego?





Well, immediately I was like, "I'm a tattoo artist," I was fooling myself to a certain degree. I mean ... it would be hard for me to look back and really remem­ber clearly being as arrogant and as full of myself as some of the people I see today. But maybe I was? I don't know. I do know that one of the guys that I respect the mostand he's an old friend of mine now, and I had him tattoo my whole backhe influ­enced me greatly and I learned a lot from him ...





What's his name? Eddy Deutsche. He lives here in L.A. now.





Are you influenced by having people guest at your shop too? Absolutely. It's incredible. It's won­derful. And that's why I really like to have this shop serve as an embassy for tattoo artisans. If someone approaches me and I haven't met them before but they genuinely have something to bring to the table and they need a place to do their appointments










when they're in Los Angeles, I encourage them to approach me.





Once again, it comes back to reputation, you know? I think the reputations for musicians and tattoo artists alike have a lot in common. That reputation is sort of your introduction. And you have to rely on reputation as well when you don't know somebody. Respect is the gift you give yourself, so the respect of your peers can only come when you respect yourself as well. That must have a hugs impor­tance in all of this, you know? I would not be where I'm atin any facet, mind-set, geographic or otherwiseif it wasn't for that, And at this point, I've been tattooing long enough to where it's





How long? Over 20 years now.





And you're only 15 years old. Yeah, it's crazy,





That brings me to another thing. Even though there's a mainstream element to tattooing now, is it important to you to be a renegade within that? It's important for me to vocalize my opinion even if it's not a popular oneto say what I feel is right and wrong in the tattoo world. I'm mor­ally bound by those choices. So by default, yes is the answer to the question.





There are people who are outsiders in this out­side community. Not outsiders per se, but not the Disney version either. Do you feel a part of that minority? Oh, absolutely. I've embraced my position completely. And I feel that I have to vocally protect my position. Like, once I got into a verbal argument with a guy at the first New York Rose-





land Convention. He was pushing for the legislation about the legalizing of tattooing in Massachusetts. And I tried to tell him, "Man, all you're doing is bring­ing the system in. Giving opportunity to a bunch of people who ... just want to regulate it for their own economic reasons. You're inviting a bunch of aphids to the rosebush." And his argument was, "Well, it's my right. I was raised in Martha's Vineyard"go fig­ure, Martha's Vineyard"and it's my right to legiti­mately be able to open a shop." And I was thinking to myself, Just because it's your right to do some­thing doesn't mean it's the right thing to do.





Well, yeah. I think In that respect, that's why I wonder if being an outsider's outsider is part of the goal. Our generation is basically going to be held responsible for the historical value and preservation of a lot of important facets of the craft. I mean the important facets, not just the ego of the artist and the naive flattery they get from whatever customer base they isolate themselves with.





But it also feels good to be respected in your time. I agree,





It's something to have peers' [respect] ... whether that's with infamy or a certain amount of notoriety matters not to me. Well,





notably, infamy is a form of notoriety.





It is. It's just that I reckon you have a cer­tain amount of notoriety. You know, "There's Clay. Let's go say hi to him." And infamy would be mare like, "There's Clay. Let's stay here." [Laughs.] That's been the bane of my existence. Rl