Posts Tagged ‘friends’

Choosing Butterfly As Your Tattoo Art

Sunday, July 18th, 2010

It is not uncommon that you will find many females will choose to have a butterfly tattoo on their body, however do not be shocked as some males also like to choose butterfly over some other more masculine tattoo form. Butterfly is essentially, an animal with perfect symmetry, thus you can always expect that the owner of such tattoo have an interesting story to tell about their life. You will find these tattoos in big and small designs, as well as some tribal ones. One reason why butterfly tattoos are so popular among females is because it portrays femininity. The action getting a tattoo is a strong enough statement for any females that they’re taking charge of their life, and thus having one of this tattoo can help signify the need to take charge but to remain feminine at the same time.

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Choosing Butterfly As Your Tattoo Art

Programmable Tattoos

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

You know how we change our appearance by designing and tattooing colourful images on our skin? Wouldn’t it be cool if these tattoos were still permanent, in that we didn’t have to keep redoing or reapplying them, but the images themselves were variable? What about if these were not only transient but could also be animated? What a way to express ourselves that would be! Chameleons kind of do this to blend into their surroundings. Squid and octopi do it too. They have these special skin cells, chromatophores, which change colour, reflection or even refraction. This also allows them to attract mates or scare off competitors and predators. Imagine how freaked out the workplace bully would be! Well, this is not quite as farfetched an idea as you may think. There’s a very clever man called Robert A. Freitas, Jr., a researcher at the Institute for Molecular Manufacturing in California. This guy came up with the idea that you could implant a display just under the skin so the light was visible through it on your hand or arm, for example. This display, which was reported in Cryonics magazine, would have a couple of billion or more light-emitting nanorobots that would move around to spell out words or make other images in the display and all you have to do to control it is tap yourself… Freitas actually wrote a series of books describing his very complex idea. The purpose for this invention was basically self-diagnosis or health management. Just imagine the uses for a diabetic, for instance. As you could imagine, anything under the skin is better the thinner and more flexible it is. Just such a “nano-skin” polymer film was recently shown by scientists at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. This very thin and very flexible polymer infused with billions of carbon nanotubes could make incredibly thin and flexible displays. Modifying subcutaneous tattoos using special inks has also been patented. This relies on a kind of ‘digital ink’ tattooed into the skin. A set of drive electrodes manually applied to the skin manipulates the tattoo image electrically. Wouldn’t it be great if we could have programmable tattoos that were both continuously dynamic and tied into digital data displays. Just imagine: no more needles. Actually, to avoid having the display implanted under the skin, wouldn’t it be really great to have a digital tattoo that you could apply ‘on’ your skin? Well, ask and you shall receive, my friends. In a speculative design that first appeared in Popular Science, tattoos are applied to the skin like Liquid Bandage. Well, ok, it is a bit more complex than that. First a matrix with conductive microrods is applied. Then a powered pad that aligns the microrods with an electromagnetic field is placed over the skin for a minute until the matrix is dry. This is followed by a layer of digital ink matrix then another layer of conductive microrod matrix aligned at right angles to the first. Programmable digital tattoos would be the display component of a low-power Wireless Personal Area Network (WPAN). The WPAN’s pocket-sized server would be capable of synchronizing with a Wi-Fi enabled PDA and allow for uploading of new calendar data, display drivers and display imagery icons. Imagine if you had Asperger’s or were just very bad at reading your wife’s mood. Get her to display a smiley face depicting her mood and you are out of trouble.

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Programmable Tattoos

Tattoo experience: My first tattoo – the Shrike

Monday, February 9th, 2009

tribal tattoo

Author tonid -tonid@bme.anon It took me quite a long time to reach the right decision. But finally I did it. It all started somewhere around 1998. My girlfriend (now ex-girlfriend but still one of my best friends), got her first tattoo. It was a miniscule black panther on her shoulder. The same year she got a floral design on her arm, and a similar one on her lower back. All three tattoos were done by the same beginner artist, and were actually quite terrible. The ink quality made them grey out within a year or so, and they simply looked like an amateur’s work. Luckily, in late 1999 or early 2000, we discovered Artur Szolc. A friend of mine from work got a tattoo, and the quality was excellent. I asked her who made it, and she gave me Artur’s phone number. So my girlfriend decided to get her tattoos corrected by Artur. When I saw his work, I knew one thing. If I was ever to get a tattoo, it would have to be made by him, nobody else. But I was still very far from making such a decision. Especially since I had no idea what I wanted to have tattooed. Within the next couple of years, my girlfriend got her tattoos extended (now she’s got one all over her back), and about a dozen of my friends, neighbors, colleagues etc. decided to get tattooed (by Artur, of course). But I was still uncertain as to the subject of my future tattoo. My first ideas were related to my zodiac sign (Capricorn), in a tribal form. Then I thought of a realistic dwarf miner (since I first read LOTR, I was fascinated with the dwarfs). But the true inspiration came in late 2006. There was no planning, there was no reason why it came. I simply one day thought about it, and then knew that was perfect for me. The Shrike. I first read the Hyperion Cantos in 2001 or 2002 I believe. I was instantly in love with this science-fiction series. It was way better than anything I have ever read in the past. I absolutely loved the whole universe portrayed, all the characters, everything. I still do. I found myself a lot like Raul Endymion. But why choose the evil Shrike to be the subject my tattoo? Well, it would be difficult to explain without spoiling the story, and the readers might not like that. Enough to say, that the Shrike is not as bad as it may seem. It symbolizes pain induced in order to awaken empathy. And when that empathy awakens, the Shrike stands its guard. So my personal Shrike is the guard of my personal empathy. Even though in late 2006 I already knew, that if I was to get a tattoo, it would be the Shrike, and it would be made by Artur Szolc, I still didn’t make up my mind. But one summer afternoon in 2008, I took a nap, then I woke up, simply picked up the phone and called Artur to arrange an appointment (with the earliest possible date ?January 2009). Just like that. And so, on January 19, 2008 I got my first tattoo. I sent Artur excerpts from the book, depicting the Shrike. I asked him to design the Shrike on the basis of only those excerpts, not the drawings one could find on the Web (which, in my opinion, are very inaccurate). Artur decided, that he would rather design it with me present, so the first three hours of my appointment we were drawing, discussing, correcting, until we came up with a design that I was satisfied with. Then it took Artur only about an hour and a half to complete the Shrike’s head. We decided to leave the rest for the next session, since this was my first tattoo. The experience itself was much less painful than I expected. I was a bit scared, since one of my friends actually fainted when he was getting his first tattoo . I found the pain completely bearable, it was more irritating than painful, and I almost fell asleep when Artur was working. I found out that the less I tense my muscles, the less pain I feel. The healing period afterwards was short. After about 2 days the epidermis peeled off. After about 4 days there was some itching, but it was bearable. Within a week the tattoo seems completely healed. The remaining part of the Shrike shall be tattooed probably in late March 2009 (at the latest). The Shrike’s upped body will cover my whole arm, with two of its four arms encircling that arm, and the remaining two spread wide, down below my elbow and above my shoulder, ripping the skin. We may also add a background: the Shrike’s Tree of Thorns.

tribal tattoo

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Tattoo experience: My first tattoo – the Shrike

Girl’s upper back tribal tattoos

Monday, February 9th, 2009

tribal tattoo

Free upper back tribal tattoo designs back tattoo for girls

tribal tattoo

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Girl’s upper back tribal tattoos

Rihanna Star tattoos -Celebrity tattoos

Monday, February 9th, 2009

tribal tattoo

there are some cute star tattoos on Rihanna’s back Celebrity Rihanna tattoos.

tribal tattoo

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Rihanna Star tattoos -Celebrity tattoos