From the popular BME “geek tattoo gallery“…
Highbrow Geek
(Turing Machine)
Lowbrow Geek
(Tetris Block Bracelet)
Definitely not a Geek
From the popular BME “geek tattoo gallery“…
Highbrow Geek
(Turing Machine)
Lowbrow Geek
(Tetris Block Bracelet)
Definitely not a Geek
Hey, remember the guy (IAM:teddyfourskinn) that got the WENDY’S logo tattoo? Well, he just got a new one (done at Body Language Tattoos in Barbourville, KY), and it’s just as oddball:
Kent Fazekas‘s parents just came to visit him from Indiana, and while in California not only did they each get a small tattoo, but he got their footprints tattooed (by JD at Outer Limits in Long Beach) on the bottom of his feet — “Hurt like none other, but I’d do it again”
And I’ve seen lots of Orion tattoos and even piercings and scarifications before, but I kind of liked Bimbieus’s full body “anatomically correct” concept interpretation of the Orion constellation (done by Allen at Euphoria in Tallahassee, Florida) — although perhaps one could argue that the placement of Saiph and Rigel are too low (aren’t they — or at least Saiph — his knees)?
BME’s geek tattoo section is a perennial favorite of visitors who would otherwise not visit a tattoo website, and contains some of the most interesting pieces, among them this sphenoid bone tattoo on my friend Pip:
She got it as a reward to herself after receiving her PhD; Pip writes:
I am a bone geek with two human bone-related degrees. The sphenoid is a fantastic bone, shaped like a butterfly, moth, or alien space bat depending on how you look at it. It is one of those objects that proves that nature can just create the most amazing works of art. I fell in love with the form of the sphenoid when I first saw one and spent a lot of time sketching and doodling sphenoids when I was learning cranial anatomy.
I liked the ambiguity of the shape, during my PhD studies I had come across a lot of art-historical theory about readers and super-readers, the gist being that depending on your level of knowledge, an image can carry different layers of meaning. This was particularly applicable to my chosen tattoo design: to the standard viewer, it would look like a gothic, gargoyle-esque butterfly; to the super-readers (i.e. bone geeks like me) it would be recognizable as a bone. It works too, I tested it out on a few osteology students at college and they recognised it instantly, whereas people at work need to be told what it really is! (Incidentally anatomists/doctors tend to be slightly confused, largely because they don’t understand what possesses someone to get a cranial bone tattooed on their back — or anywhere else for that matter).
Got an interesting tattoo? Email a high-res photo to [email protected].