If you are going to make a decision to get tattoo, you will get confused while selecting a tattoo design. Someone said "Trying to make a list of styles of tattoos is like trying to make a list of every culture on earth." People who are looking for tattoo design often get influenced from others.
Flash
A flash tattoo is a typical tattoo design printed or cardboard and tattoo shops often have posted on their walls or in their design books. Most traditional tattoo flash was designed for rapid tattooing and used in "street shops". Customers can walk in, point to a flash and get it done, usually in a couple of hours. These are designs that the artist has normally done hundreds of time, and so can finish quickly. Hand-drawn, local tattoo flash was largely replaced by professional "flash artists" who produced prints of copyrighted flash and sold them at conventions or through the Internet. Most designs are created by the tattoo artist from an idea brought in by the customer. A few of the more common flash designs include hearts, roses, butterflies (we all remember the trendy tramp stamp), and a host of other subjects that are generally taken from the traditional tattoo style.Tattoo flash may or may not come with an outline, also known as a line drawing. This outline is typically printed on a separate sheet. This is convenient for the tattoo artist, who would otherwise have to draw the linework for themselves.
Traditional American (refers to Old school)
Traditional American tattoo refers to old school featuring bold black outlines and a limited color palette. This style of tattooing is thought to have originated on American military bases in the 30s or 40s, but has become more associated with sailors than with military. it is a traditional American and European tattoo style opening the tattoo tradition in the newest Western history. The graphic is characterized with bright colors --mostly solid red, yellow, green, blue-- frames with bold black outlines. the shadowing is little or not at all. Big bold sections of black and solid colors feature prominently in these designs and the subjects are often maritime in nature, or elebrations of love or reflections on love lost. As such, anchors, hearts, pin-ups, ships make up some of the most depicted subjects of this style. As I posted before about the origin and history of tattoo, (http://goo.gl/QX9hPF), tattooing was like an act of symbolic defense against misfortunes on the sea. Also sailors put on their bodies portraits of their beloved girls left on the land or other symbols reminding about them. All these factors influenced a lot on the tradition, which began to form in the end of 19th century. The most well-known classic traditional american tattoo motifs like swallows, anchors, mermaids, beautiful girls, hearts, roses, water, fishes, nautical stars roots exactly in the sailor way of life In 2004, Christian Audigier took Ed Hardy’s traditional American tattoo work and turned it into a mainstream high fashion line of clothing, making some admirers of the style happy to see the work get that kind of recognition and others upset that one of the more well-known artists of the genre ‘sold out.’
Christian Audigier took Ed Hardy’s traditional American tattoo work and turned it into a mainstream high fashion line of clothing. |
Black and gray
Before you get the Black and Gray tattoo,Please check this video.
Classic Skull Tattoo
a) Prison/biker
You can get any tattoo which can be completed in black and gray. But as a style in and of itself, there are two specific branches of black and gray. The first one has come to be known as prison or biker tattoos. It’s easy to assume that the reason for the naming is that because the style is only worn by prison inmates or members of biker gangs, but as with all forms of tattoos, prison/biker tattoos have gone mainstream. However, their genesis does appear to go back to the American prison system where colored ink was impossible to come by, and so the style was forced to evolve. Aside from not using color, the defining characteristics of biker or prison tattoos are that they often of a more morbid nature featuring skulls, or of a memorial nature. To this end, many, but not necessarily all biker/prison style tattoos feature sayings or phrases in script, and sometimes are nothing but script.
b) Fine-line
You can get any tattoo which can be completed in black and gray. But as a style in and of itself, there are two specific branches of black and gray. The first one has come to be known as prison or biker tattoos. It’s easy to assume that the reason for the naming is that because the style is only worn by prison inmates or members of biker gangs, but as with all forms of tattoos, prison/biker tattoos have gone mainstream. However, their genesis does appear to go back to the American prison system where colored ink was impossible to come by, and so the style was forced to evolve. Aside from not using color, the defining characteristics of biker or prison tattoos are that they often of a more morbid nature featuring skulls, or of a memorial nature. To this end, many, but not necessarily all biker/prison style tattoos feature sayings or phrases in script, and sometimes are nothing but script.
b) Fine-line
Chicano Style La Catrina Tattoo by Holger @ Tattoo 4 You Wuppertal
Jesus black and gray by one of the masters of fine line: Jose Lopez
The other major branch of black and gray is known as fine-line, or in some circles, Chicano-style. Chicano tattoo began in the Pachuco gang culture of the 40s – and 50s in California, Texas , New Mexico and Arizona. These tattoos were originally made by hand with a sewing needle dipped in India ink. Classical Chicano themes are Christ, the Virgin Mary and women.Arguably, this style is the evolution of the prison tattoo. It features fine lines with great depth of shading, all in tones of gray. Without a doubt the most classic Chicano subject is a little Pachuco cross tattooed on the hand between the index finger and the thumb.Once upon a time it was used to identify gang members and to show solidarity to the gang, while for outsiders the Pachuco represented crime and violence. For the inner circle however, Chicano tattoos represents loyalty to the community, to the family, women and God (one of the countless gods invented by humans).Thanks to the warmth that the tones provide, this styles is often used for memorial pieces, and perhaps most effectively on portraits and other realistic pieces.
Original sources : http://goo.gl/5pTvJu
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