Tattoos
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Thanks @sabergirl. xD check out Steve's Morris' Instagram. He's a genius. He is tattooing my throat next. So stoked.
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@Filthy25ozJunkie that tattoo is sick! Incredible art.
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Thank you Kudos to Stan Winston and Steve Wang for making such an awesome creature.
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@Filthy25ozJunkie not sure if it's your thing but have you thought about entering any competitions? Not to try to win any absurd prize but just to share the piece with more people.
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I asked Steve about that, and he didn't seem interested. He's been on TV a couple of times and I think it kind of wasn't a very positive experience.
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Understandable. I would imagine if he is doing work as nice as your arm he doesn't really need any more attention than he already gets. I'm sure business is good.
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@Filthy25ozJunkie you are a beast! 4 days of getting tattooed for 7 hours each day, I could no way in hell do anything near to that. Bet the artist loves you though, they love knocking out big pieces as quickly as possible.
Closest i've got is a couple of 5/6 hour outline sessions on my back. i am a wimp actually, i go for 2 hour sessions.
I'm gonna get my calf tattooed next year by a different artist and he only does day sessions (6 hours), which i'm guessing is the norm with more popular/busier artists -
I'm gonna get my calf tattooed next year by a different artist and he only does day sessions (6 hours), which i'm guessing is the norm with more popular/busier artists
And that´s huge problem in todays "tattoo scene". Would never say yes to something like that. Fuck the norm. Really dont feel that attitude. But maybe people last longer under the needle when you use a crap/modern machine…
Still dont get it, why do you want some US43200 chainstitched selvedge old shuttle loom jeans when you get tattoos made from rotary machines. But maybe that is just me. Nevermind
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@Niro the shop owner Don MacDonald gave me the Badass of the Year award. Steve'S schedule could be full indefinitely. But he chooses to only take on projects that he wants to do.
@JCMx800 rotary machines with needle cartridges are far superior to old fashioned machines for so many reasons. I like how everything even the tube is disposable and hygienic. They are also totally silent. They do single needle tattoos that are hammered in that are even more old school than machines. But that is just silly.
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only of the year?
but seriously you must have an insane pain threshold. Did you struggle with it at all? Did Steve space out the time on the high pain areas like inner bicep and elbow ditch?Yea JCM, I would not do whole day sessions, which included high pain areas like inner bicep or ribs, no way i can hack that shit. I agreed to do 6 hour day on my calf as I think it will be comparable to outer arm, which is low pain. Plus after doing 5-6 hour on my back, it's probably going to be piss easy to handle in comparison.
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I feel like I'm getting more pain sensitive these days, but I'm sure it's also because I get the more painful areas now. Could do 9 hours on the chest a few years ago but 6 hours on the back & ribs are too much now.
Some sessions need to take Long - my back was fully handdrawn within 2 hours and it toolk us about 7-8 hours to get all the lines in. That was the worst session so far, but if I had to split my whole backpiece in 2-3 hour sessions I would have needed to travel 20+ times. So I'm glad that the artists keep working as long as they do, I'm sure 6 hours+ is not an easy job for them as well.
And I share the sentiments regarding rotaries, it just doesn't feel right to me. But that's just an elitist purist view, like comparing Vinyl to MP3. The objective results shouldn't differ much, at least in the old school motive range. (Realistic might be a different cup of tea.)
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@Niro he did the back of my arm to the elbow the first day. My shoulder and inside the bend of the arm the 2nd. The outside of my forearm the 3rd, and the inner forearm the last. Honestly other than near the wrist and near my armpit (where I am extremely ticklish) the was almost no pain at all. He gives me ibuprofen during the sessions and plenty of hot tea with honey and apple juice.
I've pulled out my own teeth with pliers before. So, my pain tolerance might be higher than average.
Regarding rotary tattoo machines, I just go to a tattooer who's work I like. I know not having to listen to a buzzing machine for hours is really nice. I think most of the progressive tattooers in America use them now. I think a lot of the newer rotary machines reproduce the stroke of a coil machine. So the difference in quality or techniques is virtually the same.
I asked Steve about it and he likes using the most advanced technology available. He always has the newest phone and laptop and uses his computer to draft his designs. He does paint stuff in oils and owns many old school tattoo machines. I think they like the rotary machines because they are so easy to use and there virtually no clean up. You just throw everything away.
But I'm not really a part of any scene nor am I a tattooer- so I just go by the quality of work the tattooer outputs.
If all the sewing machines at Iron Heart broke and they wanted to use modern ones, I wouldn't care one iota. I wouldn't care if the quality was the same. I just like Iron Heart because the materials and craftsmanship is excellent, and the fabric is awesome and comfy. I like that they don't have slaves making the clothes too. And the clothes look sweet as heck.
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^love it! Mermaids are always a great motive and this one is really awesome.
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I really like the mermaid @TrickHell really clean.
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@Niro it looks awesome, who's doing it?
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@Niro great work [emoji106]
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