Q. Soooo I'm considering getting a tattoo done not just a small flower or butterfly but a piece generally triangle shaped on my chest(After I put more thought into my design and the meaning). I love tattoos and piercing but the main reason I want a chest tattoo is to cover a heart surgery scar that I've had since age 4... Im 21 now and its somewhat faded but Im still self conscience about my scar. I know getting the tattoo will give me more confidence to wear low cut shirts and dresses that I NEVER EVER EVER WEAR outside my home. I plan to have a career in teaching but I am more then comfortable wearing high-cut attire.... since ive been doing it for this long. So can you give your opinion on what you think about chest tattoos on women. Im not worried about the inevitable sagging at 50 something issue more so when im like in my late 20s early 30s meeting some guys parents, picking a dress for my wedding..... and not trying to die alone...... you know the general
A. my daughter has a "zipper". she is currently 3. and if at any time she wants to cover that scar with a tattoo i would be 100% behind that decision. you shouldn't worry about the opinions of people you haven't met yet (future in-laws and such) you need to do what makes you happiest with your body you apparently have put alot of thought into this and are looking for a design that has meaning to you .you aren't talking about getting a flaming skull on your cleavage up to your neck.
my advice is find the design that makes you happiest get the work done and go forward with the rest of your life with a new confidence. any decent man will see that confident person and not the tattoo.
good luck.
my advice is find the design that makes you happiest get the work done and go forward with the rest of your life with a new confidence. any decent man will see that confident person and not the tattoo.
good luck.
shoulder tattoo?
Q. if i were to get a small tattoo on my shoulder blade, how much would that hurt? i'm very sensitive to pain, but i want one badly. one a scale from 1-10, 10 being the worst. i know its probably different for everyone but what place would hurt the least. how much would the shoulder hurt? thanks (:
A. As a heavily tattooed individual I can vouch for one thing and one thing only. Tattoos are addictive.
Pain is subjective. What I am saying is that everybody has their own pain threshold. Women tend to have a higher pain threshold than men. But that is not a rule, just a generality.
Tattoos feel different depending on many variables.
The skill of the artist,
The area of the body being tattooed,
The complexity of the tattoo,
The quality of the equipment being used,
The mind set of the person getting the tattoo,
As a general rule, the closer to the bone, the more pain there will be. Even this is not a hard and fast truism
Any artist worth talking to will be willing to give you a dry run (no ink to see how it feels) if they believe that you are serious about getting a tattoo. Let them know you want one but have no concept of the way it will feel or if you will be able to handle the pain.
Now some advice from a veteran.
Spend some time looking at pictures of artists' work, NOT THEIR FLASH!
Research the reputation of the artist and the shop they work out of.
Make damn sure that you can live with tattoo design and placement in the future (I don't mean tomorrow, think 30 years from now).
DO NOT GET A PIECE OF OVERDONE FLASH TATTOOED ON YOUR BODY!
Even if you want a standard/classic design, ask the artist to personalize it. Make it his/her own in their style. You really don't want the same tattoo that the last 50 people got, do you?
Enjoy your tattoos. They will be beautiful and, hopefully uniquely yours.
Pain is subjective. What I am saying is that everybody has their own pain threshold. Women tend to have a higher pain threshold than men. But that is not a rule, just a generality.
Tattoos feel different depending on many variables.
The skill of the artist,
The area of the body being tattooed,
The complexity of the tattoo,
The quality of the equipment being used,
The mind set of the person getting the tattoo,
As a general rule, the closer to the bone, the more pain there will be. Even this is not a hard and fast truism
Any artist worth talking to will be willing to give you a dry run (no ink to see how it feels) if they believe that you are serious about getting a tattoo. Let them know you want one but have no concept of the way it will feel or if you will be able to handle the pain.
Now some advice from a veteran.
Spend some time looking at pictures of artists' work, NOT THEIR FLASH!
Research the reputation of the artist and the shop they work out of.
Make damn sure that you can live with tattoo design and placement in the future (I don't mean tomorrow, think 30 years from now).
DO NOT GET A PIECE OF OVERDONE FLASH TATTOOED ON YOUR BODY!
Even if you want a standard/classic design, ask the artist to personalize it. Make it his/her own in their style. You really don't want the same tattoo that the last 50 people got, do you?
Enjoy your tattoos. They will be beautiful and, hopefully uniquely yours.
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