Lene wrote:
Quote:
What I do now (tattooing) actually requires me to talk to people
I would
never have guessed you were a tattoo artist... if I thought about it at all, I would have said 'accoutant' or something (dunno where I got that from though...profile pic maybe)
<That profile pic is an official USPS Charlie Chaplin '
The Little Tramp' commemorative stamp. A
Tramp Stamp. Get it?
Oh, BTW - the actual name for the much maligned lower back tattoo - '
Vanity Belt'Lene wrote:
I seriously considered tattooing in high school. I'd be too afraid of botching up the job though; it's not like paper where you can just start over or rub it out...

That's why you spend months apprenticing under an experienced professional, practicing on grapefruits, honeydew melons, latex foam pads and finally tomatoes, before you ever touch actual human skin. It also helps to spend some time studying up on your dermatology, so you understand exactly what you're doing when you inject ink between layers of skin tissue. And why in most cases, you draw the design on paper until you're sure its the way you want it - then you transfer it onto a temporary carbon stencil which adheres to the skin, and follow the stencil. Even so, one of the skills you learn is how to make those tiny mistakes look like they were
supposed to be that way, same as when you shade something into a drawing instead of erasing it, or subtly smudge colors together in a painting rather than trash it all and start over.
There are tattooists who will just freehand straight onto the skin, but I have to admit my b*lls aren't that brassy. I'm way too critical of every detail of my own work to do something that risky and careless.