Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Usher in the Year of the Tiger with a New Tattoo!

2010 Looks to be a great year and I am looking forward to ringing in the new decade on January 2nd by visiting a new tattoo shop of the Lower East Side called Thicker Than Water Tattoo Studios.

From Noon to 10:00 PM, artists in the shop, which just opened on December 1, 2009, will be inking Year of the Tiger tattoo specials for $50.00 apiece. It's first-come, first-served, folks, so don't show up too late.

In case you were wondering what kind of tattoo this deal will get you, we here at Tattoosday were thrilled to get a sneak peak of the flash from which customers can choose, and got the blessing from Shon Lindauer, designer, tattooer and shop manager, to share the designs with our readers:



So, come on down to Thicker Than Water and start the new decade with an appropriate Tiger tattoo to ring in the year!

Usher in the Year of the Tiger with a New Tattoo!

2010 Looks to be a great year and I am looking forward to ringing in the new decade on January 2nd by visiting a new tattoo shop of the Lower East Side called Thicker Than Water Tattoo Studios.

From Noon to 10:00 PM, artists in the shop, which just opened on December 1, 2009, will be inking Year of the Tiger tattoo specials for $50.00 apiece. It's first-come, first-served, folks, so don't show up too late.

In case you were wondering what kind of tattoo this deal will get you, we here at Tattoosday were thrilled to get a sneak peak of the flash from which customers can choose, and got the blessing from Shon Lindauer, designer, tattooer and shop manager, to share the designs with our readers:



So, come on down to Thicker Than Water and start the new decade with an appropriate Tiger tattoo to ring in the year!

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Horimitsu TATTOO work today 額 牡丹


急遽仕事。(^-^;)

Haste work. (^-^;)

Trabajo de prisa. (^ - ^;)

Horimitsu TATTOO 年末年始休業中



仕事納めや忘年会なども終わり今日からお休みです。
本年は皆様からご愛顧いただきましてありがとうございました。
一年の疲れをゆっくり癒します。
皆さんも良いお年をお迎えください。

The work paying and the year end party, etc. also take a rest end today.
Thank you for patronizing it from everybody for this year.
Tiredness is slowly healed for one year.
You also must receive a good year.

El trabajo que paga y el año acaba la fiesta, etc. también tome un fin del resto hoy.
Gracias por patrocinarlo de todos durante este año.
Se sana cansancio despacio por un año.
También debe recibir un año bueno.

祈りの手:Praying Hands

Posted by 彫倭 Akilla a.k.a. Horiyamato

Sunday, December 27, 2009

ツバメ:Swallow

Posted by 彫倭 Akilla a.k.a. Horiyamato
ツバメとスペイン語 で『家族への尊敬』"Respeto a mi Familia"。
ツバメの下絵は1999年のスモール・ポールというタトゥー・アーティストのフラッシュ(下絵)より。今まで自分が見てきたツバメの下絵の中ではスモール・ポールのが一番。自分で描いてもこれを越えるのは描けないので、ツバメに関してはいつもお客さんに説明してこの下絵を使用しています。
彫倭
Swallow with spanish script, "Respeto a mi Familia".
Every time when I do swallow tattoo, I use 1999' Small Paul's flash. Of course I tried many times to draw my own swallow but always this flash is better, so I tell customers about it and use this flash.
Thanks Small Paul.
... and thanks Kiki for the spanish translate!
Akilla a.k.a. Horiyamato.

Saturday, December 26, 2009

龍:Dragon

Posted by 彫しゅん Horishun

暈し始めました。
彫しゅん

I started  shading.
Horishun.

Horimitsu TATTOO work today 龍



本日一件のみ。
龍。
で、本日終了。

Only as for the today work.
A dragon.
Well, it is finished today.

Sólo en cuanto al hoy el trabajo.
Un dragón.
Bien, está acabado hoy.

Friday, December 25, 2009

All I Want for Christmas is a Tattoo with Teeth

On Christmas Eve afternoon, I was passing through Penn Station, I spotted Lindsay, a woman with what appeared to be a sleeve that had a water-inspired design.

It wasn't until after I approached her and asked if she wanted to contribute to Tattoosday that I saw, as she rolled up her sleeve, what awesome work she had done on her left arm:


Lindsay said that, like all of her 14 or 15 tattoos, none of them have "deep meaning". She just goes with whatever she describes as an "intense urge" at the time she's getting the tattoo.

The sleeve above started with her taking photos with stylings to the artist, saying she wanted a bloody shark. This was the first part of the tattoo:


She then expanded it with this segment of shark


which is certainly reminiscient of the movie poster for Jaws.


This piece was created in four sittings lasting 3-4 hours each, by John Reardon at Saved Tattoo (which was the shop responsible for yesterday's post, too).

Work from John Reardon has appeared here on Tattoosday previously. Work from Saved appearing on the site can be seen here. Reardon is also the author of The Complete Idiot's Guide to Getting a Tattoo.

Thanks to Lindsay for taking the time to share her incredible shark sleeve with us here on Tattoosday!

Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays!!

All I Want for Christmas is a Tattoo with Teeth

On Christmas Eve afternoon, I was passing through Penn Station, I spotted Lindsay, a woman with what appeared to be a sleeve that had a water-inspired design.

It wasn't until after I approached her and asked if she wanted to contribute to Tattoosday that I saw, as she rolled up her sleeve, what awesome work she had done on her left arm:


Lindsay said that, like all of her 14 or 15 tattoos, none of them have "deep meaning". She just goes with whatever she describes as an "intense urge" at the time she's getting the tattoo.

The sleeve above started with her taking photos with stylings to the artist, saying she wanted a bloody shark. This was the first part of the tattoo:


She then expanded it with this segment of shark


which is certainly reminiscient of the movie poster for Jaws.


This piece was created in four sittings lasting 3-4 hours each, by John Reardon at Saved Tattoo (which was the shop responsible for yesterday's post, too).

Work from John Reardon has appeared here on Tattoosday previously. Work from Saved appearing on the site can be seen here. Reardon is also the author of The Complete Idiot's Guide to Getting a Tattoo.

Thanks to Lindsay for taking the time to share her incredible shark sleeve with us here on Tattoosday!

Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays!!

Thursday, December 24, 2009

Horimitsu TATTOO work today いろいろなモチーフ


本日一件のみ。
いよいよ終わりに近いです。
年内には終わらなかったです。
来年年明け一回やって終了。

Only as for the today work.
It is finally almost the end.
It was not over within this year.
I do it once in the new year and am finished next year.

Sólo en cuanto al hoy el trabajo.
Es finalmente casi el fin.
No era terminado dentro de este año.
Lo hago una vez en el nuevo año y soy el próximo año acabado.

騎龍観音:Kannon on the Dragon

Posted by 俊宝 Shunho

これから観音に色をつけていきます。
俊宝

I add a color to the Kannon from now on.
Shunho.

Max's Spin on a Traditional Gypsy Tattoo

I was passing through Penn Station late yesterday when I spotted Max, who offered up this fascinating tattoo:


At first glance it looks like the traditional gypsy piece, but if you look closely at the back of the gypsy's head, you can see Max added an element that extended the design up and around his right arm:



That is a deer skull that the gypsy woman is wearing, complete with a set of antlers.

When I asked Max about this he acknowledged that the tattoo, in concept, had started as just the old-style gypsy profile but, growing up in Maryland, he said that there were deer everywhere around his home, and that this was a nod to his former home state.

Perhaps reading too much into it, I asked him if he was taking a symbol of home and tying it to the nomadic image of the gypsy to illustrate a dichotomy between the two contrasting lifestyles. He nodded and said he hadn't thought of it in those terms before, but it seemed to make a little sense if you looked at it like that.

This is one of nine tattoos Max has. The piece in question was designed by Paul Bosch at Saved Tattoo in Brooklyn. Max came to Paul with the concept and left it to the artist to design the tattoo. Work from Saved has appeared previously on Tattoosday here.

Thanks to Max for sharing this fascinating spin on the traditional gypsy tattoo with us here on Tattoosday!

Max's Spin on a Traditional Gypsy Tattoo

I was passing through Penn Station late yesterday when I spotted Max, who offered up this fascinating tattoo:


At first glance it looks like the traditional gypsy piece, but if you look closely at the back of the gypsy's head, you can see Max added an element that extended the design up and around his right arm:



That is a deer skull that the gypsy woman is wearing, complete with a set of antlers.

When I asked Max about this he acknowledged that the tattoo, in concept, had started as just the old-style gypsy profile but, growing up in Maryland, he said that there were deer everywhere around his home, and that this was a nod to his former home state.

Perhaps reading too much into it, I asked him if he was taking a symbol of home and tying it to the nomadic image of the gypsy to illustrate a dichotomy between the two contrasting lifestyles. He nodded and said he hadn't thought of it in those terms before, but it seemed to make a little sense if you looked at it like that.

This is one of nine tattoos Max has. The piece in question was designed by Paul Bosch at Saved Tattoo in Brooklyn. Max came to Paul with the concept and left it to the artist to design the tattoo. Work from Saved has appeared previously on Tattoosday here.

Thanks to Max for sharing this fascinating spin on the traditional gypsy tattoo with us here on Tattoosday!

Horimitsu TATTOO work today 鯉 カバーアップ



本日二件目。
鯉。カバーアップ。
今年は春からお世話になりました。
来年もよろしくお願いいたします。
で、本日終了。

Today the second case.
A carp. Cover up.
I was taken care of this year from spring.
Next year thanking you in advance.
Well, it is finished today.

Hoy el segundo caso.
Una carpa. Cubra a.
Me cuidé de este año de primavera.
El próximo año agradeciéndole de antemano.
Bien, está acabado hoy.

Horimitsu TATTOO work today 剣龍


本日一件目。
剣龍。
今年はお世話になりました。
来年もよろしくお願いいたします。
良いお年をお迎えください。

Today the first case.
KENRYU.
I was taken care of this year.
Next year thanking you in advance.
Please invite a good year.

Hoy el primer caso.
KENRYU.
Me cuidé de este año.
El próximo año agradeciéndole de antemano.
Invite un año bueno.

Horimitsu TATTOO work today 額

昨日三件目。
更新忘れの上、写、写真が撮れてない・・・。(^-^;)
スミマセン。

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Woman, Deconstructed

With winter upon us, I have been tempted to bemoan the scarcity of visible ink on the streets (or subways) of New York.

But Mother Nature giveth, as well, by depositing the powdery white stuff and causing delays that held up commuters in Penn Station.

One such soul was Kaeti, a visual artist passing through NYC on her way from Philadelphia.

This pheomenal tattoo jumped out from her corporeal canvas on Tat-tuesday, catching my eye as I walked by:


Kaeti originally thought she was going to get a sleeve inspired by the work of Salvador Dali, but the scale and concept didn't converge in a final design.

She went to the artist, Andrew Johnson-Lally, at Body Graphics on South 4th Street in Philadelphia. She described for him the general concept behind what she wanted, something along the lines of a representation of a female figure, deconstructed. Kaeti also is very influenced by stitching, so she brought along examples of work she had, which included stitched sculpture and sketches. Andrew drew something up based on these styles that she liked, with her ultimately yielding creative freedom to the artist.


To me, she was describing a collaborative effort, which many tattooists and their clients create. Another example of her influence on the end drawing is the empty eyes, which Kaeti said was similar to a lot of the work she herself was doing around the time of the tattoo being inked.


The whole piece took about 3 and a half hours to complete. Initially she told me that when the tattoo was initially completed, she thought that it was finished. Like many people with large tattoos, however, Kaeti is tooling with the idea of expanding the work to include background, which might involve wrapping around her arm and making it a "true" sleeve.

Incidentally, work from Body Graphics has appeared previously on Tattoosday here.

I want to thank Kaeti for taking the time to speak with me in a crowded Penn Station, and for sharing her fascinating tattoo with us here on Tattoosday!

Woman, Deconstructed

With winter upon us, I have been tempted to bemoan the scarcity of visible ink on the streets (or subways) of New York.

But Mother Nature giveth, as well, by depositing the powdery white stuff and causing delays that held up commuters in Penn Station.

One such soul was Kaeti, a visual artist passing through NYC on her way from Philadelphia.

This pheomenal tattoo jumped out from her corporeal canvas on Tat-tuesday, catching my eye as I walked by:


Kaeti originally thought she was going to get a sleeve inspired by the work of Salvador Dali, but the scale and concept didn't converge in a final design.

She went to the artist, Andrew Johnson-Lally, at Body Graphics on South 4th Street in Philadelphia. She described for him the general concept behind what she wanted, something along the lines of a representation of a female figure, deconstructed. Kaeti also is very influenced by stitching, so she brought along examples of work she had, which included stitched sculpture and sketches. Andrew drew something up based on these styles that she liked, with her ultimately yielding creative freedom to the artist.


To me, she was describing a collaborative effort, which many tattooists and their clients create. Another example of her influence on the end drawing is the empty eyes, which Kaeti said was similar to a lot of the work she herself was doing around the time of the tattoo being inked.


The whole piece took about 3 and a half hours to complete. Initially she told me that when the tattoo was initially completed, she thought that it was finished. Like many people with large tattoos, however, Kaeti is tooling with the idea of expanding the work to include background, which might involve wrapping around her arm and making it a "true" sleeve.

Incidentally, work from Body Graphics has appeared previously on Tattoosday here.

I want to thank Kaeti for taking the time to speak with me in a crowded Penn Station, and for sharing her fascinating tattoo with us here on Tattoosday!

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

虎:Tiger

Posted by 彫倭 Akilla a.k.a. Horiyamato

新しく腕に虎。黒墨で仕上げます。
彫倭

I started a tiger on his arm.
Akilla a.k.a. Horiyamato.

Horimitsu TATTOO work today 額


本日二件目。
額。
今年はお世話になりました。
来年もよろしくお願いいたします。(^-^)/

Today the second case.
GAKU.
I was taken care of this year.
Next year thanking you in advance. (^-^)/

Hoy el segundo caso.
GAKU.
Me cuidé de este año.
El próximo año agradeciéndole de antemano. (^ - ^)/

Monday, December 21, 2009

Horimitsu TATTOO work today いろいろなモチーフ


本日一件目。
いよいよ触れる所がなくなってきました。(^-^;)

Today the first case.
A place to finally touch disappeared. (^-^;)

Hoy el primer caso.
Un lugar a finalmente toque desapareció. (^ - ^;)

Two More Tattoos from Josh

Well, more than six months have passed since I posted Josh's amazing Verrazano Bridge tattoo, and I almost forgot he sent me some additional shots, including the clock from the old Penn Station on his inner bicep, which is interconnected with the bridge piece:


This is a fairly accurate homage to this bygone historical monument seen at the top of the photo below:


Josh, being in the military, also has this back piece:


This tattoo consists of a pair of variations on the caduceus, surrounding the insignias of the 44th and 30th Medical Brigades - the two units he was assigned to in Iraq.















Thanks again to Josh for sending along these pictures and if you haven't seen the Verrazano tattoo linked at the top of the post, you must go check it out.

Two More Tattoos from Josh

Well, more than six months have passed since I posted Josh's amazing Verrazano Bridge tattoo, and I almost forgot he sent me some additional shots, including the clock from the old Penn Station on his inner bicep, which is interconnected with the bridge piece:


This is a fairly accurate homage to this bygone historical monument seen at the top of the photo below:


Josh, being in the military, also has this back piece:


This tattoo consists of a pair of variations on the caduceus, surrounding the insignias of the 44th and 30th Medical Brigades - the two units he was assigned to in Iraq.















Thanks again to Josh for sending along these pictures and if you haven't seen the Verrazano tattoo linked at the top of the post, you must go check it out.
 
coompax-digital magazine