As most of you probably know, I write. Like, novels and stuff. :)
(Don't worry, this really *is* about tattooing, I promise)
Eight or nine years ago, more or less, I wrote my first novel. Blood and Skin was a paranormal thriller(like a ghost story, but with more action) set in a tattoo shop. (See? tattoos totally figure in here!) That first novel written was not the first novel published - these things happen. However, this year I pulled it out, dusted it off and gave it a good thorough rewrite.
So much has changed in the last nine years: My cellphone references were laughable. A trip to the bookstore had to be replaced by the gift of a Kindle. And virtually everything about the way I tattoo is different now.
For a long, long, long time, I was what you might call a Classic Tattooist.
-Work the whole tattoo over in a black outline, then color it in.
-Smaller work, mostly. Bigger pieces, sleeves and the like, got done an hour or two at a time.
-The tubes were metal, and they went into an autoclave for sterilization between uses.
-Most clients picked designs out of flash books. It was just the way things were done.
-Rarely use a hard black line, and often do the entire, nearly finished tattoo in a single pass from bottom to top.
-While I still enjoy the odd small piece, full-day bookings are the norm. Half-finished work rarely leaves the studio.
-Like our needles and bags and inks and everything else, our tubes now are also disposable. The autoclave still gets used for piercing, but we run a clean, safe and hygenic tattoo studio without having to do our own sterilizing.
-All of our work is custom now. When you come in, don't expect a bunch of design books. Do expect a conversation about what you want, how you see your art looking, etc. That's just how we roll :)
It seems like tattooing is changing. Except that tattooing doesn't change, not exactly. From 90's tribal designs to hundred year old traditional Old School to folks tapping a mallet on the back of a stick full of needles, nothing in tattooing has gone away. We just keep adding to it, making room for more. And in recent years, this art I love finally made room an artist like me...