Love connecting the Earth and the Heavens

It’s almost become traditional for a person suspending to share a lift or at least an intimate moment with their partner if they’re present — and I think that’s natural given both how vulnerable and how powerful a suspension makes the individual in that moment. The top photo is of “Itza Mess” (of Senzala Tattoo in Puerto Rico) and her fiance Jay Nunez, and the bottom photo is of Kelsi lifting her boyfriend in a six-point superman (nicely balanced) facilitated by Russ Foxx.

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Jay’s suspension was at such a beautiful location — old Spanish ruins from the late 19th century — that I just had to include this long shot of him in the air there as well. While I’m putting those two photos above into context, let me also share another shot of Kelsi being swung about by Russ.

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Lion Scar Revitalized Via Tattooing

Here’s another beautiful example of combining a well healed piece of scarification with tattooing to both enhance it and extend its lifetime. For the first year or two, a scar is usually quite defined just by its color, if not how much it has raised. However, as time goes by, the color of a scar lightens, and the raised effect diminishes, and in some cases it can be quite difficult to make out — at least in comparison to how it looked when it was young (the same is true for my entire physique, I’m afraid to admit, but let’s not depress ourselves). Adding tattooing is a superb way to revitalize that scar, as in this great example of abstract swirls of colour bringing out this lion scarification by Alejandro Hernandez Salazar of San Luis Potosi, Mexico, who works out of Tattoos by Spooky.

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Rubeus Mendes

I can’t have something so miserable as the butchered piercing sitting at the top of ModBlog overnight, so I want to share this great portrait of Brazillian stretching master and nerd extraordinaire and now beard king Rubeus Rafa Mendes Hagrid to ring in the evening.

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Go to a qualified piercer!

A woman came in to Douglas at Lucky Street Tattoo in New Bern, NC because she was concerned about the three microdermals she’d had done on her hip two days earlier in Wilmington, NC. When she showed up, what Douglas saw — to his horror — was what just looked like bug bites, with no sign whatsoever of the jewelry. You might think from the picture that it had just fallen out in the night and she ought to be searching her bed, but after examining her the truth was much more sickening and disquieting. They had sunk deep into the skin, nearly an inch into the tissue. If I had to guess, this almost certainly happened because the hack who did this isn’t good at inserting this type of piercing, and made holes that were too large to make insertion easier (not realizing the harm it would cause), resulting in the tops sinking.

As Douglas put it, “I don’t get how some hack piercer could abuse the trust of a client so much and cause so much wrong. She was in tears as I was explaining to her [what had happened]“. Anyawy, here is what he saw when she first walked in:

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The good news is that Douglas didn’t have to hack her up to get them out — he was able to excise the deeply buried jewelry without having to create any new holes. Not that it be surprising, but those gem-set microdermals that the so-called piercer charged her $160 for? Those were just cheap foilback Skin Divers, a cheap variation on the microdermal that’s essentially a labret stud, which most piercers I’ve discussed it with feel is an inferior product to standard microdermals.

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In the end, the client left much happier than she arrived. After removing the failed submerged Skin Divers, she returned for an appointment the next day to get three high quality Anatometal titanium anchors using 4mm flat back discs, placed on the opposite side from where the original catastrophe was done.

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I was starting to get very tired of all the posts on Facebook and elsewhere complaining about low quality body artists, but I really hope that the average person understands the message — skimping on your body can easily end up costing far more in the long run, not just in terms of wasted money, but in pain and suffering and disappointment. Go to a qualified piercer for your body art.

Fundraising for The Illustrated Penguin

It makes me not just sad but so angry that I have to make this post. Jason, who you may know as “The Illustrated Penguin” (who has been featured here on ModBlog a few times — here’s a small selection of posts: 1, 2 3) has been in and out of the hospital for a pre-existing kidney condition, with the hospital stay adding new infections to the mix. Because it’s the United States, being sick has brutalized him financially, and he’s in rough shape, so his friends are putting together a fundraiser, which you can find on Facebook here: facebook.com/events/106768719470488/. This is going to be capped off with a benefit show in Portland, currently planned for Portland on September 15th. Join that Facebook group to stay up to date, and of course either Rob or I will post updates to ModBlog.

If you’d like to help out, you can PayPal him directly (please set it as “gift” to avoid additional fees) at [email protected] (sorry, I can’t risk linking it from here due to Paypal’s shaky relationship with BME). Jewelry companies and anyone else who might be able to help out with an online auction to raise funds should contact Hilary at [email protected] (or track her down on Facebook at facebook.com/hilary.lobitz). Any support no matter how small is appreciated.

Finally, let me wrap this with a fun video to remind you what a wonderful character and unique performer Jason is: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KnMZ95_wDPk

100/1000/1000 – Congratulations Rolf!!!

Those of you who follow Rolf Buchholz (Guiness’s new most pierced man) on Facebook or watch the BME suspension galleries may have noticed that he does a lot of suspensions. What you may not be aware of was that these were part of a larger ritual — to do one hundred suspensions, using one thousand hooks, over one thousand days. He has just completed this remarkable journey.

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Mantis Piercing

I’m assuming you can tell from the purple marking line on his face which piercing is new. Now, you might be thinking to yourself, why is Shannon calling it a Mantis piercing? Is he going soft in his old age? Because that’s clearly an Austin Bar, not a Mantis piercing! But where you’re wrong is that you’re not looking at one piercing (an Austin bar is a horizontal piercing across the tip of the nose, like a far-forward nasallang), but two. The mantis piercing is essentially a very strangely placed — but still essentially standard — nostril piercing, which also means that it has faster healing than the Austin bar in general. Instead of going out to the side of the nostril, it goes straight forward, and in a pair gives the illusion of being a horizontal bar. It’s not a piercing that would work well on its own, and while you don’t need as many piercings as this perforated fellow, it is a piercing that looks best in combination with other nose work.

This Mantis piercing was done on Nicola by 23 year-old body piercer Massimo Cortese of Wildink Tattoo Studio in Naples, Italy, and currently guest spotting in Ferrara. Done centrally, this piercing would be called a “rhino“, but off-centre Massimo is calling it the Mantis, which I think is a good name for it. Oh and I had fun joking to my daughter that if this person sneezes that everyone around them has to take cover because all that body jewelry goes shooting in every direction like shrapnel. But in all seriousness, I suspect that this piercing in part came about because this gentleman is simple so covered in piercings that they spent some time brainstorming for new places to pierce!

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A Dildo in the Dark

This portrait of George Karakioulafis about to slash the viewer with a piece of broken glass belies his gentle nature that should be obvious from what I believe is probably the largest swastika tattoo of anyone out there. I actually just got a great package from George and the others at Dildo Studio (dildostudio.gr) with some awesome shirts and stickers that I’ve been forbidden from wearing around pretty much any family member. But I will sneak out wearing it late at night. Oh, and if you want to learn more about the rebirth of the post-Nazi swastika, do follow svasticross.blogspot.ca who recently picked up the animated swastika tattoo we posted a few days ago. Well, I have an early morning doctor’s appointment, so I will leave tomorrow morning to Rob, and be back with more in the afternoon. Thanks everyone for the warm welcome. Later days.

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Scarred Tetris Heart

As if you can’t tell by Haffie’s “post scarification glow”, “I’m not sure there is a happier customer than myself today!” His tetris heart design (which might look amazing one day filled in with tattooing one day in the future). I’m not sure if I should be a little sad about the statement that’s being made by the final ill-fitting brick that is just beginning to fall? In any case, this was done by Luke Iley at the aptly named Scarred Heart Body Modification in Leeds.

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Tattoo “theft” is not always what it seems

I saw this nipple tattoo (the one on the left) posted on a friend’s tumblr blog, and not long after it was posted it was followed up by an angry accusation of being copied from the smaller image on the right (which the sharp-eyed may notice is on a friend who I’ve posted a few times). I’m not sure who the accusation came from as I’m not a tumblr user, and if it’s from the wearer, I want to be clear that I don’t think less of them for their moment of upset — it’s natural to feel this way at first. However, I think that it’s important to realize that now that the entire f-ing world is tattooed, it is unavoidable that people will have similar tattoos.

I have seen floral nipple tattoos and other decorated nipples since the very beginning of BME. They are an obvious idea that lots of people have had, because they’re a great thing to do. And one of the most obvious nipple transformations is into a flower. As flowers go, these are far from a line-for-line copy. I can’t tell you if the one was inspired by the other, or if they were both inspired by an even earlier similar tattoo. But I can tell you that there are hundreds if not thousands of almost identical tattoos to this that were done long before both of them. If we are going to accuse the one tattoo in this entry of having stolen from the other, then I think we can easily call both of them thieves many times over — and we can start saying that about the vast majority of tattoos.

One of the unfortunate things about the very wonderful reality that the tattoo community has grown massive is that if you want to work with traditional motifs — be it oldschool sailor tattoos, or be it “tribal” designs, or be it flowers — that you are going to from time to time end up with almost identical tattoos to someone else through complete coincidence (or ethically valid inspiration). When you get a small tattoo like this, you should expect that it’s going to have some overlap with other people’s tattoos — this is an unavoidable truth. Sometimes it happens because of shared inspiration, sometimes it happens because they were inspired by you or vice-versa, and sometimes it’s going to be pure “great minds think alike”. I can’t emphasize this enough — when you work with traditional motifs, it is unavoidable that you will eventually see someone who at first glance appears to have “stolen” your tattoo. It’s not the end of the world though — your tattoo is just as wonderful as it was before you saw its doppelganger.

Certainly you have the right to get upset if someone copies your large original custom tattoo line for life. But if someone just does something similar — for example, an anchor on a neck, or a flower on a nipple, or a blackwork arm — you don’t have the right to be upset or to accuse them of wrongdoing. I think if you let yourself find fault and trauma and upset in such casual similarities, you are asking for misery. It is not worth it — better to celebrate the other message this sends: that we are on the same team, and have an aesthetic agreement about what is beautiful.

(Click through to view the image.)

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Edit: I wanted to also mentioned this nipple tattoo, which is more likely a copy, rather than just being similar. I think in this one’s case, one of the two was almost certainly inspired by the other. However, because this type of flower is common on flash sheets and is a traditional design, it is impossible to tell for certain unless someone admits it.