Remember when 80′s hair bands toured the world to spread glam and STD’s….

……this is like that, except  less glamorous, and without the disease transmission.

Ron Garza, as I have mentioned in previous post, LIVES body modification. He often travels the world to personally experience  the other cultures rituals and body modification practices. Currently though, he is out on tour not to experience things for himself but to help others have their own experiences and to spread his knowledge.

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Ron has 2 days still open in Prague and  some appts. left in Croatia also, where he will be teaching as well.
He will also be teaching in Mexcio city APP also and taking scar appointments in Mexico City as well. If your in any of these areas and want to take some of his classes, get cut or just shoot the shit with a guy who lives for body modification, definitely hit him up.

Another way to improve upon a not so nice tattoo

So you  have a tattoo, conceptually you like it, but the execution wasn’t so great. Like this camera tattoo, the lines are blown out and the design was done way to small, but it’s still a camera and it still expresses it’s wearers love of photography.

So what can be done about a tattoo like this? You could have it covered, but the coverup would likely be far larger than what you wanted. You could laser it off……or you could accentuate it with a microdermal, such as this young lady had Mike Knight do for her.

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I think this beautiful princess cut stone  threaded end from Anatometal, definitely adds some much needed pizzaz to this otherwise underwhelming tattoo.

There will be blood

Oh yes, there will be blood when your ear is cut like the image below.

ear!

Now, if you’re like me and only took a quick glance at the image, you’re probably thinking right now “holy crap he cut his ear off!”.  Well, that isn’t the case today.  DorianVilify uploaded this image of a large gauge helix piercing he performed recently.  From the angle of the image I can’t tell if he used a punch or scalpel  to cut it out, but in either case, there was definitely a lot of blood involved.  You can get a better look at it from the side in the cartilage gallery.

It’s interesting to think of how the image of blood affects different people.  For the squeamish, this image probably creeped them out, to others this is just an average picture and nothing to be concerned with, and yet for some, this is a huge turn on.  What are your thoughts about the image itself?  Does the blood make the image stand out?  Or is it just a distraction from the ear?

ModBlog News of the Week: Sept 16th, 2010

It’s been a little while since there has been a newsfeed post, but never fear, your news from the world has returned.

The big story this week is obviously the ruling from the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals.  Now I’m not fully versed on U.S. legalities, but from what I understand, the 9th Circuit is one of the highest courts underneath the Supreme Court.  If you haven’t heard, the city of Hermosa Beach in California was brought to the court because they refused to allow the opening of a tattoo studio in city limits.  The challenge brought to the court that tattoos are a form of free speech, and the city cannot ban the opening of the studio.  The L.A. Times recently published this article summing up the ruling.

In a majority opinion that sometimes reads like a paean to the art of the tattoo, Judge Jay S. Bybee concluded that tattoos — and by extension the tattoo business — are a “purely expressive activity” covered by the 1st Amendment. Tattoos, the judge wrote, “can express a countless variety of messages and serve a wide variety of functions.” Indeed, the medium of skin can also be the message. Bybee said that by “permanently engrafting a phrase or image onto his skin, the bearer of that tattoo suggests that the phrase or image is so important to him that he has chosen to display the phrase or image every day for the remainder of his life.”

Whatever one thinks of tattoos, it’s impossible to disagree with Bybee’s conclusion that “a form of speech does not lose 1st Amendment protection based on the kind of surface it is applied to.”

As for what this ruling means to people in the U.S., ModBlog will be doing a full article on it from a guest writer, discussing exactly what the ruling entails and how it will affect the industry.  So keep an eye out for that in the coming weeks.

In other news, a teacher in Madison, WA, has found a way to use tattoos to get kids to understand math.

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Madison Middle School 6th grade math teacher, and entrepreneur, Kathy Myers, wants students across America to have a piece of the “pi.” The North Admiral District mother of two began a part time “temporary tattoo” business, Academic Tattoos, with math equations and slogans for students to affix to their hands, arms, cheeks, and even foreheads to remind them of equations and to increase their interest in math. Some stickers contain pi puns such as the “Vam-pi-re” design, the pumpkin with pi symbol over it. Get it? “Pumpkin pi?” And for the brainy high school senior, how about the quadratic formula on your shoulder, or the golden ratio, a design that evokes architect Frank Lloyd Wright-meets-seashell.

Ok so maybe they’re not real tattoos, but it is a fun idea that may help kids to learn, and from where I stand as a former teacher, I don’t see anything wrong with that.  I’m sure though that a debate will arise in which some parents may see this as a gateway tattoo which will eventually lead their children down the dark and scary road to a real tattoo.  But nobody would overreact like that would they?

There’s still more news ahead, keep on reading to see some examples of modifications and faith interlinked. Also, the celebrity news is back with a vengeance!

So when it comes to faith and body modifications, one name comes to mind immediately, The Church of Body Modification.  It’s been a while since I’ve seen anything about them in the mainstream news, but recently in North Carolina a teenager was suspended from school for sporting a single nostril piercing.  When ordered to remove it, Ariana Iocono refused on the grounds that her and her mother are members of the Church.  WLFI has the rest of the story.

A North Carolina school is disputing a student’s claim that body piercings are next to godliness.  Church minister Richard Ivey says its members believe that changes to the body can bring about inner harmony.  School officials declined to discuss the case.  The Iaconos say they’ve contacted the American Civil Liberties Union for help.

The article also includes the TV report that goes along with the text.  In the video it is revealed that while the school does have a no piercing policy, exceptions must be allowed if there is a reasonable religious reason to have the piercing.  In the case of the school principal, he has decided not to recognize the church and will keep Ariana suspended until she removes the piercing.

Now on the other side of the U.S. a small California church recently celebrated it’s first year of operation by having several members get tattooed.

City Church of Anaheim is celebrating its first year in operation and the goal of reaching a 200-member flock with a radical commitment to the congregation and community: Tattoos of the red-heart church logo.

Pastor Kyle Steven Bonenberger told worshippers that God “tattooed your name on his heart” and it was time for an everlasting commitment to Him and the church.

Just over a dozen members got the church’s logo tattooed on their chests, and as the congregation grows, they predict more members will get the tattoo.  What intrigues me is how differing the reactions to faith and modifications are across the country.  On one hand you have someone who is a member of a church dedicated to modifications being punished for her beliefs, while on the other you have a pastor celebrating his Christian faith through a tattoo.  I wonder what the western world would be like if centuries ago it was mandated by the church that tattoos and piercings are a reflection of your spirituality and should be encouraged.

The mainstream news has always had a love-hate relationship with modifications.  They love to post stories about them, but only if they can generate some form of reaction.  Of course the easiest reaction to evoke from someone viewing the news is fear, followed by anger.  Anyone who watches Fox “news” can tell you that.  So while perceptions are finally changing, the vast majority of stories that I read have a negative slant towards anyone with a tattoo, piercing, or anything else.

Thankfully there are changes happening in the press, which show that it isn’t the modifications that should instill fear in someone, but their actions.  Beyond that, you have stories like this one from The Daily Aztec, which shows just forward thinking some news outlets can be.

Tattooing is an ancient cultural tradition dating back thousands of years, but western tattoo culture is largely influenced by American sailors who traveled abroad to exotic countries and returned home with ink. Norman Keith Collins, better known as Sailor Jerry, developed the traditional American tattoo design style in the 1930s.

“The Sailor Jerry stuff — the tattoos with imagery of roses, swallows, skulls, daggers, hearts — the real simple, heavy, black shading with bold lines, is making a comeback,” Chris Primm, a tattoo artist at Sleeping Giant Tattoo in Hillcrest, said.

Fast-forward 80 years to present-day and tattoo culture is no longer seen as an indicator of socioeconomic factors, but more so of a generational trend. Tattooing has always been popular within specific societal subcultures, but throughout recent years, tattooing has exploded into mainstream America.

The article goes on to discuss trends that have come and gone in the industry, and how the days of the grungy back alley shops are giving way to the clean studios with art hanging on the walls.  Of course there are still stereotypes associated with visibly modified people, and they will probably still linger for a couple more decades as the older generations give way to the younger ones.  By the time generation Y hits middle age, they’ll have grown up in a world where tattoos and piercings are the norm, and the stereotypes will have hopefully faded away.

Although with some kinds of tattoos, the stigma of criminal behavior may take longer to get rid of.  Specifically gang related tattoos.  Recently Homeboy Industries in Los Angeles was given a $1.3 million contract to expand their services to serve as a re-entry program for people wishing to get a new start in life.

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Los Angeles County supervisors Tuesday awarded Homeboy Industries a $1.3-million contract, providing critically needed funding for the gang intervention program founded two decades ago by Father Gregory Boyle.  The struggling gang intervention program will be able to hire 20 job trainees and provide employment counseling, tattoo removal, mental health, legal and other services for 665 people.

The tattoo removal portion of the program can be seen as a major stepping stone in an individual’s life, as they’re able to shed a symbol that not only links them to their former gang, but also links them to the life they are leaving behind in order to move forward.

Before we get to the celebrity news, there is one thing that was submitted by IAM: Quinnnchick.  It seems that everywhere you look there is some form of Sailor Jerry/Ed Hardy design printed on something.  Well, if you’re the type who enjoys having these images on items around them, then you’ll be pleased to know that you can now get paper towels that can match your clothing.

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Personally, I don’t think I’ll be getting them, but I do think they’d look good hanging on the wall in a studio somewhere.  Although with the dyes in them, I probably wouldn’t want my artist using them to wipe down anything.

Finally, it’s the moment I know you’ve been waiting for, it’s the celebrity news.  Yay?

Well not really a celebrity on the world stage, the new Prime Minister of Australia has a family member that’s been generating some news.  It seems the step daughter of the PM has posed for some risqué photos showing off not only her love of Australia, but also her mohawk and tattoos.

Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard’s wild child ‘stepdaughter’ has appeared in a raunchy photoshoot wearing only a bikini and the Australian flag.  The tattooed New York-based stylist Staci Child, 31, who is the daughter of Gillard’s partner Tim Mathieson, posed for Zoo Weekly magazine and says her ‘first man’ father loved the photos.  ’I think Julia will think it’s a very Australian thing to do,’ she added.

However, not everyone is thrilled with the photo shoot.  RSL State President David McLachlan said the Australian flag should be respected.  Australians for Constitutional Monarchy spokesman Prof David Flint also expressed reservations.  ’It may be somewhat undignified and not what you would have done but then again you’ve got to allow young people a certain degree of liberty in these sort of things,’

Of course all of this screams publicity, as I’m sure Staci has no problems cashing in on her stepmother’s name in order to drum up business.  I am wondering why none of the Bush daughters did something like this though, weren’t they supposed to be on the rebellious side?

In celebrity DIY news, it seems that Canadian born Ryan Gosling has given himself a tattoo.

“I like when they look bad, but no one will do bad tattoos. So I did one myself. That’s why it’s bad. I’m waiting to get old — I think old guys with tattoos look good.”

To each their own I suppose.  On a completely unrelated note, my ex used to hold hands and walk to school with Ryan every day.  Does that make me one step closer to Kevin Bacon?

And finally, just when you thought Jesse James, Kat Von D, and Bombshell McGee were gone from the news, think again.  First there are reports that Michelle was booted from a party for showing off her white power tattoos.  Now it seems the highly esteemed journalists at TMZ have uncovered shocking evidence of a link between Kat and Sandra Bullock, that isn’t Jesse James.

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Back in 2001, Kat Von D — a famous celebrity tattoo artist — was asked to ink a permanent image of Sandra’s face onto the chest of one of her male clients who happened to be a huge fan of “Speed.”  So there you have it — Kat Von D is now dating the ex-husband of a person she once tattooed on a total stranger.  How’s that for full circle?

Well how about that.  It’s like they’re sisters or something.

So, that’s it for this week’s news.  Remember if you ever come across a story that you think should be included in the News of the Week, just use this link to submit them.

Simplicity in the eyes

The traditional view of the third eye is that it is a key point in spirituality.  Cultures all over the world have stories and beliefs all tied to the third or inner eye.  In the western world, the most common interpretation comes from Hinduism and Buddhism, in which the eye is represented by a mark on the center of the forehead.  With the onset of microdermal piercings, many people have been able to move beyond the painted mark, and are now using the jewelry as a more permanent symbol of their spiritual ties.

IAM: dogs of war had her forehead microdermals put in a while ago by IAM: Six from Toronto.  Below you can see them fully healed up, but more than just that, you can really get a sense of the meaning of the third eye.

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So as Dogs of war looks off into the distance, her third eye is open and is viewing everything around her, giving her insight beyond what her eyes can see.

This image came from the microdermal gallery, where there are other images of the third eye placed into people.

You might feel a little pressure

Normally when you see a photo of a suspension, you’ll see one of three things.  The first and obvious one is the person in the air, the second is after they’ve landed, and the third is of the moment before lift-off where the person is preparing themselves with the rigging and hooks all in place.

Well this photo doesn’t fit into any of those three categories, yet somehow it is still one of the most significant moments in the ritual of a suspension.  I use the term ritual intentionally, as modern suspension has strong ties to rituals from all over the world, but also because it has become its own modern ritual.  The person suspending is preparing to enter another state of being, as their flesh is pierced and they are lifted from the ground, suspended by only their own body.  The practitioners are modern day priests, there to ensure the ritual follows the rites that have been set down before them.  They prepare the individual mentally, by talking them through it.  They facilitate the ritual itself, by throwing the hooks, setting up the rigging, and observing to ensure everything is done safely.  Finally they are there for the person when they return to earth, to guide their transition back into world that they had left.

So while to some it may seem like a suspension is just some guy hanging from hooks, to the people involved it can be a very spiritual and powerful experience, one that can change someone’s life, even if it is just for the time they are in the air.

I want to thank IAM: oOunbekanntOo for sharing this image with us.

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You can check out the suspension itself over in the suicide suspension gallery.

Do you have any images from a suspension you’ve done?  What about a story to tell of a time that you suspended?

If you do, head on over to your account page on BMEzine.com and send in your pictures and stories.  Don’t have a subscription yet?  You can get a free one today so you too can submit content.

Sometimes bigger is better

IAM:Twosteps sent in this shot of himself the other day, and unless I’m missing something it looks like he’s managed to stretch all of his piercings above the neck.

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I know that the concept of “bigger is better” has been discussed on ModBlog recently, but in the case of Twosteps here, he shows off that for him, bigger is definitely better.  When it comes to stretching out any piercing, there’s a degree of commitment made towards an eventual goal.  I use the term commitment because the act of stretching is a long and involved process.  Of course it can be sped up at points with the assistance of a skilled practitioner, but over time there is only so much outside assistance one can get.  In the end it takes both mental and physical commitment to the goal for it to be realized.  So in addition to the time it takes to stretch something out, there is also the need for patience, because we all know what can happen if a stretching is rushed.

Thankfully for Twosteps here, it looks like everything is going well on his part.  I don’t know if he’s done with everything or not, but the matching jewelry, combined with the placementof the piercings, really make the big piercings look great on him.

Magnets, how do they work?

Apologies for the ICP lyric, but it’s been a while since we’ve had a story about magnetic implants I couldn’t help myself.

Rata, from Rata Body Art Studio in Buenos Aires, recently spent a couple of months working in Florida as a guest artist.  On his last day in Florida, Pinhead and Johnny Vilonius decided to surprise him by giving him some magnetic implants as a parting gift.  Rata has had his work featured on ModBlog before a couple of times, but I believe this marks the first time that he’s been the subject of the photo, not the artist behind the work featured.

Thanks to Johnny for sending in the photos.  According to him the procedure only took 10 minutes, and he was on a plane back home the very next day.  The first image is of Rata looking at his fingers, and the second is of Pinhead inserting the magnets.

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You can check out the rest of the images in the discreet implants gallery.

Points of Symmetry

Symmetry gets mentioned often with relation to modifications.  I’ve seen countless comments on ModBlog praising a person whose facial piercings are matched up perfectly.  A while back The Discovery Channel did a documentary on sex appeal, where it was mentioned that people find others more attractive the more symmetrical their faces are.  I believe there was a BBC documentary on something similar as well.

The point of all this is to look at why the same trends towards physical beauty carry over into the modified community.  Is it just that we’re programmed genetically to see something symmetrical as aesthetically pleasing, or is it a conscious choice on our part.  Of course this doesn’t apply to everyone, as there are a great many people who find things that are asymmetrical much more appealing.

Take this play piercing session as an example.  IAM: oOunbekanntOo submitted this image of his first ever play piercing session to BME’s play piercing gallery.

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Given that the design was intended to be symmetrical, do you think you would feel differently about it if it were an asymmetrical design?  In the lower right hand corner you can see a couple of needles have shifted direction (probably when he stood up).  Is your eye drawn to this point because of the flaw in the symmetry, or does the overall image supersede an unintentional shift?

What about those who prefer asymmetrical designs, is there anything you would prefer to see different about the design, or should this session just be viewed for what it is; a great play piercing session that a member of the community shared with us.

Lock and Key

“To hide the key to your heart is to risk forgetting where you placed it.”

–Timothy Childers

It seems that ModBlog regular IAM: Efix has been pretty busy the past few days.  With the Montreal Tattoo convention, and several guest spots finished, Efix has come home and has uploaded to BME some of the wonderful work he has done recently.

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I’m not sure exactly where this cutting is placed, but what I do know is that he pulled off a beautiful cutting, while maintaining the symmetry of the design.  Hopefully we’ll get to see more images of this design as it heals, as I’d love to use it for one of the Friday Follow-ups.  In the meantime, you can check out more of Efix’s work in his BME gallery.