Why transdermals suck, by yours truly

Just like some other big name guy who shed blood for his followers, I shed blood for the readers of Modblog. People are complaining that Modblog isn’t updating and I wanted to help, but without new submissions to BME there is little for me to choose from. So instead of complaining or making excuses, I took action and used this lull in post as the encouragement I needed to get those godforsaken transdermals removed from my noggin.

First and foremost, I want to be clear I knew the risk going into the initial procedure and I realized the super low success rate of transdermals. Hell, I think the BME Encyclopedia entry on transdermal removal summed it up best.

All in all, because of the low success rate and complications, transdermal implants are one of the few procedures that BME recommends against — although we fully support people’s right to get them, if and only if they fully understand and accept the risks.It should also be noted that a variety of professionals are trying to solve the problems with transdermal implants.

I got my implants done by a highly reputable practitioner, whom I also consider a friend. As far as procedures go, it was as spot on as one could hope for.  In fact, long time modbloggers may even remember this post Shannon made of them when they were brand new.

As is the case with most transdermals, they never actually healed. The wounds around the transdermal post oozed, well, pretty much constantly. The channels the implants were inserted in stayed seperated from the underlying tissue and bubbled up. Hair growth was nullified in a large circle around each of the implants……….and this is just what I dealt with in the first year.

I tried lots of remedies, some holistic, some horrific. I used everything from chamomile tea bag soaks to injecting alcohol around the transdermal stems  to dry out the excess lymph. Nothing had any lasting affects. As the years went on the implants just got worse, most started migrating and the first one (as you can see in the before picture) rejected to the point of one foot coming completely through the skin.

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While there has been no definitive study on the long term success rates of transdermal implants,  20% or less seems to be pretty accurate. I’d even go so far to assume that most of those will not last indefinitely and that a lot of the “successful” ones aren’t actually fully and properly healed.

I (speaking purely as myself, and not for BMEzine.com) feel that the  transdermal implants, as we know them, have  no place in modern body modification. The original design by Steve Haworth, was ground breaking and without that original design we may not have the microdermal anchor design that we have now. However, with the gray area legality of the implantation procedure and the unlikeliness of them properly healing, I just don’t see why they are still being commonly offered. Don’t get me wrong, if a practitioner wants to do some on a highly modded well informed client, I am not opposed, I just don’t see the point. However, the fact some practitioners will do these on any walk in client is an atrocity and a total F-You to our entire community.

One thing that I feel will certainly make transdermal implants obsolete is large gauge microdermals, such as those offered by Anatometal. With them offering micros up to an 8 gauge, that can be inserted with piercing techniques (no invasive surgery) and also removed far easier that transdermals, I just can’t see the need for an invasive and potentially illegal surgical procedure with a low success rate.

Anyhow, that’s my take on the subject, feel free to chime in your opinions on this topic in the comments. For a whole lot of photos from my transdermal removal procedure, keep on keeping on.

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All photos, thanks to Robin Scott.

Have your own transdermal failure stories/pictures that you want to share? Email them to [email protected]

Interview with James Keen; a young, heavily modified, eunuch.

I first talked to James several years ago. At the time he was a minor seeking answers to questions about heavy mods. In all honesty, I didn’t take him too seriously. I foolishly lumped him in with several other young modders that seemed to be more into the fantasy of obtaining heavy mods than the reality of doing so. In fact, I distinctly remember some photo editing of mods onto a picture of his face at one point which made it truly seem as if it was all just fantasy for him.

However, as years passed, it became obvious he was totally serious with his desires and he began to get all the mods he had previously spoken with me about.

Several years ago, he interviewed me for the now defunct youngmodders.com. Now it is time for me to turn the tables and interview him. So without further ado, I give you a conversation with the now 26-year-old James Keen.

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Sean: So, James, tell us how you first got interested in body mods.

James: Funny thing how it all started, I had desire for things like castration and face tattooing at an early age BUT what got me started was me and my friends sitting around listening to the band Korn. This is when they released the album Life Is Peachy I believe. We were sitting around listening to Korn all day and I saw my friend’s poster of the lead singer and noticed he had 3 eyebrow rings. At the time I was about 15 years old. We were all chicken shit to even venture off into piercing even though I secretly wanted to be castrated.

A few days went by and the more I saw the poster, the more this primitive urge in me said “get your eyebrow pierced!” I admit, for me it was a big step, one that would change the outcome for me on everything. Including castration and the works. At the time I believe you had to be 16 with parental consent. But I knew I needed it, the urge was bad. The more I thought of it, the more I wanted it. We all had a mutual friend who knew a guy who did piercings for minors. This is obviously a no-no for anyone out there. Get pierced the right way! But for me, I took the risk. I went in, paid him 20 dollars and he had piercing needles. He even opened one up in front of me with a new pack of jewelry. At the time things seemed clean, but looking back there were obvious signs I shouldn’t have gotten it. But I don’t regret it.

He then pierced my eyebrow at a 16 gauge. My parents saw, raised hell, and we had The Long Talk. To my surprise they said if I waited until I was 16 they would consent for a simple piercing. I kept the eyebrow for a year before moving on.

Sean: And move on you did! By far the most attention grabbing modification you have is your extensive facial tattooing, why don’t you tell us about those pieces.

James: Facial tattoos go back to me being a kid. I’m sure as kids we all painted on ourselves to look different or for fun. I remember seeing a magazine where a tribesman had designs tattooed on his face. I thought that was just beautiful. As a kid I then started painting my face, but to my disappointment it washed off. Then later I moved on to markers and pens and whatever I could get my hands on. My parents could not figure out why I was doing it. To me it felt… natural! Later on I would end up with my face covered in tattoos. It started off with me testing the waters, a spur of the moment tattoo. On my forehead I had a bullet hole wound tattooed, Which has since been covered up. On my one cheek I had a color organic bio-mech piece, the other a black and grey rotting jaw reconstruction. Later I added line work for my chin which is an eye with tentacles. And my bullet hole was covered up by skulls and bio-mech type style work.

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The cheeks represent a yin yang type thing, the color organic is to show people I am beautiful, I am nice and forgiving, and I have a good heart. The other cheek is to show that even though I’m good I still have bad in me like most do. The eyes and worm in it show I am human and my bad is a fault that will watch over me and feed on me until the day I die. The forehead piece actually is like a crude crown of skulls to show my imperfections. And the line work with tentacles holds everything together with the eye watching over all of me.

Sean: To an outsider, the facial tattoos would seem like the most life changing modification you have. However, knowing that you have been castrated, a modification which changes you chemically as well as just aesthetically, I would presume that is your biggest life changing mod. How did the desire to become a eunuch come about and how has life changed since the procedure?

James: At a young age and honestly, the motivation actually started with me wanting to be genderless. The feeling that I am not a male or female. At the time, I felt like my penis and testicles mostly didn’t belong. Though I never thought of just coming out and cutting them off. It was more of, “I do not like these, how can I rid myself of it?” This went on for years until I hit puberty. Then I really hated it. The sex drive is one thing I didn’t care for. Oddly enough I was having sex only to ease the craving I would get from the testosterone produced from my testicles. I then remember watching something about gender reassignment surgery. And then it hit me, maybe I could get my testicles removed and penis! At the very least my testicles!

I was young and for years I struggled with it. I felt like I was the only one. I then came across a site called the Eunuch Archive. And realized I wasn’t so alone. People have and wanted to get what I wanted. Most were going to surgeons to get this goal accomplished. It was then I learned full genital removal was like the city of gold, very few find it. So I made things reasonable for myself. Get castrated, and get it done so I could rid myself of what I was cursed with. In all honesty, I should have gone to a surgeon, but I didn’t. Instead I sought out a Cutter. It took a long time, but I found one. Once again I was faced with taking a chance, and I took it.

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The cutter I will not reveal, or where it was done. However, I will say he only required the supplies to do the procedure with. He did the procedure, left a stint in for draining purposes and sealed the scrotum up. I remember as my second testicle was being clipped from the body, it was an experience I won’t forget! The feeling of YES it is finally done! I remember it all like yesterday. Months after, and I’m talking 3-4 months of not taking testosterone shots or anything, I started getting hot flashes. Basically going through what a woman does in menopause. After that I no longer have them, life is good. My body hair is finer than it used to be. I can say I no longer want my penis gone, Ill keep it only because now I can tell castration really made me the person who I was supposed to be. My only worry now is osteoporosis.

Sean: I know that you didn’t go into the castration alone, you did it with your then partner, luvpain. How was this relationship?

James: My relationship with luvpain was up and down, not his fault. Its just I had jealousy problems which put strain on our relationship. We shared everything, including castration. Once we were both castrated, sex died down greatly which was okay. We started to cuddle more, kiss, caress and for fun I would do sexual things to him just to see if I could make another eunuch get off. Sorry for the blunt image. He is a wonderful soul and I feel ashamed of how I treated him since he has passed on. After that, I was actually in a relationship with a girl. Which is super odd. At first she was like how can we make this work if you don’t use your penis? I gave mostly oral sex and it lasted a while. Until she wanted me to move with her, I couldn’t do it. So we parted ways and I told her I hope she has a fulfilling life.

I have no preference sexually. I love both women, men, transgendered and what not. Even genderless people. For me a penis or vagina doesn’t matter. I look beyond that. As a eunuch, I think I can.

Sean: You have also removed your nipples, how did this mod fit into the overall plan?

James: Well the motivation for my nipple removal was simple, I wanted a Ken Doll-like effect. Unlike my castration nipple removal was purely cosmetic. I remember getting both done and keeping the nipple skin as a souvnir. I cannot remember what happend to it afterwards though.

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Sean: Trophies like that do tend to get lost over time. So you want a modded “Ken doll,” does this mean you have, or plan on getting a full penectomy?

James: I dont, I wish. I been trying to get a penectomy for years now. All I have is castration, a subincision and a head split.

Sean: “All I have”, haha, that is one way of looking at it! So is the penectomy on the long term plan? Are you just looking for a practitioner?

James: Penectomy is definatly still the plan, I once said that castration may suit me but I do want a penectomy. It’s who I am. I am not the type of person who wants a deep penectomy, one flush to the body will do me just fine. Getting a penectomy is like finding the lost city of gold, it exists possibly but very hard to get to.

Sean: Judging by what we have spoken about, and the pictures you submitted, you are extremely modified. Aside form the penectomy, are you done, or are more major modifications in your future?

James: As far as major mods go, I want a full body suit tattoo. I have a back piece going on with a full torso piece coming up. I want my left pinky tip amputated but that is to be decided. I have an amputation fetish. There is something about amputees, especially small digit amputations that really gets me going. Its more of a sexual thrill. I think a pinky tip missing is not only aesthetically pleasing but sexy at the same time. So it would only be in due time I would want the same beauty of what it offers unto myself.

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Sean: I assume you have you seen the toecutter videos on BME?

James: I have! I actually have! It was something to see too! For me watching the toecutter videos is equivalent to a normal guy watching porn! I know it sounds strange, but like I said before, small digit amputation gets me going. I remember seeing him using a chisel on one of his fingers. It was amazing, beautiful and erotic! I remember seeing pics of his feet to. He definitely has a craft for it.

Sean: I imagine your mods have a huge impact on your day to day life, but  what is your daily life like outside of the mods?

James: Well I work from home, pretty uneventful. Then I also have a second job which pays minimum wage. Washing dishes and cooking at a independent restaurant in my town. Lucky for me they know me and gave me a job and I work in the back where no one sees me. Then there is video games. I love video games. I actually own three video game consoles, the Nintendo Wii, PS3 and Xbox 360. Tons of games, and an HDTV to get the best out of my gaming experience. I also meditate heavily, I tend to meditate in calm environments.

Sean: One last thing, I distinctly remember you from is your work on youngmodders.com. Since most of our readers probably won’t be familiar with that site, why don’t you tell them a bit about it.

James: I remember youngmodders.com WOW I was young then! I remember when Shannon was running things and I came to him with ideas, he seemed to think it was a good one and set me up with a site. The idea was to have young modified people run a site for those who were younger. A place for discussion and without judgment. I did say that once you reach I believe age 18 or over, you pass the torch to another young modder to take over. Many people do not know I was involved in that, me and another fellow. It was a highlight of my life that I still hold high in regards.

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One Helluva Party

Lot’s of our readers know Allen Falkner as THE major innovator in modern suspension. This is an accurate way to think of him, but around Dallas he is known for more than just hanging from hooks. In Dallas, as well as beyond, Allen is also infamous for his ability to throw one hell of a party.

The Freaks and Fetish event is the preparty for The 2010 Dallas Suspension Practitioners Convention and will take place on Friday April 2nd. This year’s event will showcase performers and guests from around the world:

-World champion pole dancer Pantera Blacksmith

-Finland’s Snake Oil Sideshow

-The Return of Pain Solution from Norway

-Of course, returning to the role of MC is everyone’s favorite green darlin’, The Lizardman!

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With all of the freakish thrills and sexy frills, this is a party you won’t want to miss.
For more information and ticket prices please visit The Church.

Nipple destruction evolves into nipple piercing project

When I first got into this whole body mod thing, I was always fascinated by Fakir. He was the modification world’s renaissance man. He was involved in almost every facet of body modification and body play and he travelled the world doing so.

If I had to pick one man likely to be remembered as the 21st centuries modification renaissance man it would, without a doubt, be Ron Garza. So when I saw this email submission from Ron, I knew damn well it would be something awesome.

I will let him tell the story on these:

I found these pics recently from a client  from a few years back who  had done alot of heavy nipple training/torture through out  the years  and  just had alot of damage done to the tissue. Since he no longer did the nipple training, he wanted to do something to emphasize his nipples  since he felt the tattoos over powered them. So  we came up with these ideas that show through the tattoo work (he didn’t want the same  on both nipples). He was always  shy about this and didnt want to much attention drawn to them  since he was a suit on his work  time back then. I just  always thought this was  really  fucking cool.

I have to agree, and I hope you guys find these pictures to be really fucking cool as well.

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For closeups of these interesting nipple projects, keep on keeping on.

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Luck of the Irish to you.

It’s St. Patrick’s Day, and today everyone has a little luck of the Irish. However, if it wasn’t St. Pattie’s day and you wanted a little Irish luck inside of you, this would be one way of achieving that!

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Thanks Stembot, for pointing out this very holiday appropriate tattoo done by her boyfriend DOC13. Since penis tattoos are never an artist best work, why don’t you take a minute to check out some of his other work.

Of course, you know what’s behind the blur, but if you need proof, keep on keeping on.

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Love Bites

A client of Matte’s brought him a dental impression of his wife’s teeth and Matte did the scarification piece based on that. As far as the intentionally created scars that look like wounds go, this is one of my favorites so far. I really like the authenticity of using the clients wife’s actual teeth pattern.

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For a healing picture of this scar AND a scar done by actual bite marks, keep on keeping on.

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I am sure you guys remember Ala from this post, or one of her many other post. You probably also remember Roo, who served his time as a Modblog author before me. Well, this loving couple has earned another spot on Modblog with this “bite mark”  heart piece Ala did on Roo. Because that’s what Roo needs, more hearts.

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“it smells like a turd covered in burnt hair!”

I had to steal the title for this post directly from xomateos’s diary entry about the procedure. How could I possibly come up with a better title than that?

Anyhow, xomateo originally had these scars cut/removed by the talented John Joyce. A year later he had his lovely koala go back over the scars with a cautery pen to retouch the scar and hopefully kill off the follicles that regrew. This was her first time using a cautery pen and it looks like she did a damn fine job!

Apparently they plan to make these scars a yearly tradition. I suggested next year they try cold branding, because if it doesn’t kill the follicles it will likely make them grow in white and that is cool all in and of itself! So we shall see what 2011 and on brings for Mateo’s head!

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For a few more shots of the procedure and finished result, keep on keeping on.

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I bought my very first cautery pen from BME Shop several years ago. They don’t sell them anymore, but they do sell a TON of other rad stuff for the body mod aficionado or DIY modder. Rachel has extended the 30% off sale at BME shop  until April 6th! It is good for everything but anesthetics, scalpels and dermal punches and all you have to do to take advantage of this is use the coupon code “worldtour” when ordering!

And these guys just keep showing up here

Seriously, I told you these Agro guys are constantly providing some Modblog worthy content.

Saturday, I was cruising people’s IAM pages looking for possible features when I came across Jesse Star’s page there was this video of Jesse riding a minibike while suspending!  I instantly flashed back to the TSD roller blade spinning beam video from many years ago, and that is a huge compliment to these guys.

Jesse provided the following info to go with the video:

Rick Piercall runs the group (AGRO). The harness attached to the bike was holding no weight. It was just so if I was airborne and dropped the bike with my hands. The bike did not fall down and brake my ankles backwards. 2 point 4 ga gilson suicide. feet heavily attached to the seat with rope, foam, and tape. The first runs did not use the safety harness we just figured it to be a good idea.

BME Girls Calendar 03/12/2010

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For those of you interested in seeing this batch of girls who submitted their pictures for  possible use in the upcoming BME Girls Calendar, keep on reading. If this isn’t your thing, come back later for other types of modblog post.

REMEMBER: Absolutely zero negative comments will be tolerated!!!!!!

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About being a featured girlThis event is open to all BME Girls age 18 and over. Girls of all shapes, sizes and race are encouraged to submit pictures. Contestants can be dressed or nude, but nothing too pornographic will be featured. Pictures need to be of decent quality, lest the readers condemn me to hell for posting webcam shots. Agreeing to be involved is consenting to be featured in the calendar, if you are selected for it. If you want to suggest someone, feel free to do so. I will contact them and see if they are interested, but no one will be featured without their explicit approval. To submit pictures, please email them to [email protected] Make sure to include your IAM: name (or real name) in your email.

About votingVotes will be tallied by emailing [email protected], just make the subject “Vote (insert name of girl you choose)” and your vote will be tallied.  Votes will be anonymous, there is no reason for anyone to know who voted for whom and how many votes each girl got.  Voting for one week ends when the following weeks post goes up. Please note, this isn’t about competition, it’s about a fun, interactive way to get the readers involved in the selection process.

About Commenting: I am enforcing a strict ZERO TOLERANCE policy for negative comments about the girls. They are being kind enough to share themselves with us and to help BME make a calendar, they should not have to fear public ridicule. Negative comments will be deleted, if we have a repeat offender, all of their future modblog comments will be sent to moderation. This isn’t about censorship, it’s about common courtesy and respect.

Q&A with Jared of onetribe organic body jewelry.

I have known Jared for several years now, a bit before he started onetribe. When he first approached me at one of the old Richmond Suspension Socials with a few pairs of plugs and a dream, I thought he was crazy. I didn’t think it was even possible for one man to compete with the established organic jewelry companies. Well, obviously, he proved me wrong. Not only did he prove me wrong, he did so in an honorable and humble way that deserves recognition. So without further ado, I present to you a few question with jared from onetribe.

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Jared hard at work grinding jade

For the questions, keep on keeping on.

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Tell us a little about yourself and what got you into body mods.

From a young age I was interested in the idea that the body could be colored and shaped to fit an aesthetic purpose. My childhood was shadowed by my home life so I spent a lot of time alone in the basement reading the massive collection of National Geographic magazines that my grandfather had been saving for years. I learned at an early age that the world was full of people of all different colors and shapes, and that people decorated themselves both to individualize as well as for inclusion and identification. My parents were always fairly accepting of the fact that I was intellectually interested in body modification but were adamant that I not do anything to my body until I was 18 – “my house, my rules” sort of thing. I practiced some easily concealed piercings but never really kept anything in terms of permanent jewelry. I graduated high school just before turning 18 and a few months later moved several hours south to go to art school. It was there I finally started exploring piercings openly and started filling myself up with holes – professionally done tongue, nostril, nipples, lobes, and some self-done genital work. In the years immediately following I started doing a lot of research into tribal cultures and learning more about the origins of Western body modification as well as body adorning cultures closer to home. In particular my interests lie in Mesoamerican and North American cultures, and it’s those cultures I find most fascinating as I have Cherokee blood and have always been very interested in native culture and ritual, and the inherent closeness to nature that formed the backbone of those societies. In the years since, I have retired many piercings and focused on those with more historical significance, along with some heavier work including cartilage punches, my large labret, and of course a chest scarification piece that you did several years ago.

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What inspired you to start onetribe?

I started looking around for natural jewelry in mid 2002 and very little was available in terms of designs and most of it was wholesale. There were a few online companies selling retail but most of the jewelry was coming from the same places and I don’t think there were any companies that solely focused on the retail side of things that produced their own products. I saw an interesting niche for a self-manufacturing, retail direct-to-consumer business model via the web. Having been a web developer and print designer for several years I had enough background knowledge of eCommerce to pull together a web store on a budget and shave off an incredible amount of start up cost, so the only real costs were the inventory we started with and the shipping materials, making it an ideal scenario for what I hoped would be a successful shoe-string budget startup.

In starting the business I went to every body jewelry website and company I could find and scoured each site from page to page, clicked on every link, read every document, and learned about what made each business unique (or not). I also visited hundreds of eCommerce sites on the web and from all of this information I compiled a massive list of the things I did or didn’t like about each company, and the feeling and overall business presence of the website and their customer service, based on the site copy and any reviews or experiences I could find. From that I developed a business plan of what I thought the perfect “mom & pop” feeling online small business might entail.

There were a few things I found lacking specifically in the body jewelry industry in late 2002 into early 2003 – reference information & general product knowledge, professionalism (skulls, flames, and copy writing that included things like “tatz” just weren’t doing it for me), and easy to use websites that allowed for personal dialogue between the business and customer. These were the things that we focused on when writing the initial copy for Onetribe’s site and designing the user interface and products. We wanted to portray a knowledgeable, professional business that could be trusted, but that was also very creative and open to dialogue. A business that feels like interacting with everyday people was, and still is, my number one priority.

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Could you tell us a bit about the history/progress of onetribe?

Onetribe started in my bedroom in the basement of a house outside of Richmond, VA with some, admittedly generic, horn and bone jewelry carved by the artisans we still work with today. The paperwork for legal business status was filed the first week of January 2003 and Onetribe was officially born. The eCommerce site was started prior to that by myself and a friend in Rhode Island collaborating remotely, and was completed in three months and launched mid February. I badgered the hell out of my partner at the time, Rachel Easter, to help me out with the organizational and monetary side of things because I am a total math idiot and generally needed a second head to help me keep track of things, and she’s still with the business to this day as our office manager and primary customer service contact.

At the time we did not have the hardware capability or time to produce enough jewelry in house to be competitive and get off the ground, so one of the first orders of business was to find good product. There were several wholesale jewelry vendors out there to choose from but we were trying to eventually move in a different direction and make Onetribe unique, so through some phone calls and emails I ran across a guy named Everett, originally from the USA but living in Australia. He was paying his way through journalism school there by wholesaling jewelry from some artists he knew in Bali. This turned out to be a perfect match for us because after working with Everett for a little while he permitted us to start sending our own jewelry illustrations and we started turning out completely unique products. We became Everett’s biggest customer and in 2005 we were given the opportunity to purchase his company. I then travelled to Indonesia for the first time to begin working one on one with our artists there.

For the first few years I maintained a full time job while running Onetribe – first working as a youth behavior counselor at an inner city elementary school, and then for the company that prints National Geographic up near D.C. I was commuting several hours each way for a 12hr night shift and eventually it got to the point where I was too exhausted to care about much of anything and Onetribe had grown enough that if I didn’t pay more attention to it, we ran the risk of impacting the business negatively. I left having a full time job and took the plunge into self employment supplemented by some coffee shop work, which in hindsight was more for discounted coffee to fuel workaholism than it was for the money. Eventually I took the full plunge and started dedicating 60-80-100 hour weeks directly to Onetribe. Shortly after that, Rachel was able to ditch her job for full time employment at Onetribe, and we have been growing by leaps and bounds ever since.

For the first several years, growth was exponential as knowledge about the company spread via word of mouth. Until very recently we had never done advertising of any sort and relied on our customers to pass out the business cards we included with every order. We have moved the studio times, and over the years as we were able to grow our customer base and thus our sales, we have reinvested virtually everything back into the company. We helped to build a nicer workshop for our artisans abroad and started supplying tools and materials so that they had to invest nothing but their exceptional skills back into the business. We also invested in tooling and machines for our Richmond workshop and for several years now we have been making what we believe to be some of the most interesting natural custom body jewelry that exists, including reproductions of traditional Mesoamerican jadeite multi-piece ear flares, and a method for setting inlays, including stone into stone, with hardware settings and no adhesives. We have been able to build a local showroom including an antiquities museum and workshop, designed in such a way as to enable customers to come and see jewelry being made, and place custom orders on site with the materials in their hands and the understanding of how that jewelry is physically created.

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What kind of political and/or ecological stance does onetribe take with its jewelry materials and manufacturing?

The double edged sword of business is that it has to make money in order to exist, and money can cause all sorts of social and environmental problems both directly and indirectly. I decided a long time ago that because businesses hold the majority of the worlds wealth, and if structured properly they are composed of employees and customers of like mind, they should be used as a catalyst for bettering our society based on certain values. We do not take a specific political stance so much as we make it a point to promote what we believe to be values and actions that contribute to a sustainable society and environment. We try very hard to be as low impact as possible, buying materials as we need them, reutilizing and repurposing things to get the most out of everything from materials to workshop tools to computer hardware. We shred all of our business and employee junk mail as the packing materials you get in your box. There is a statement on our site about the origins of our labor and materials, that at the very least is an interesting read, but I think it tells a lot about the mentality of myself and the people that work for this business.

The biggest thing Onetribe champions for is sustainable societies – specifically, personal and community self-sufficiency and sustainable food systems. We are a very vocal advocate of healthy local economies free of the grasp of federal and corporate hold, and vibrant local food systems where everyone is guaranteed free and fair access to healthy, locally produced food. Onetribe financially supports several non-profit organizations, including Austin, Texas based “Dinner Garden,” which sends seeds free of charge to anyone in the USA wanting to grow their own food, and the non-profit that I started called Renew Richmond, currently focused on working with the city public schools on programs designed to get at-risk youth into the garden growing their own food, working with members of the community and leaving school with a sense of self-purpose and skills that will enable them for the rest of their lives. We actively encourage our staff and customers to be active participants in community dialogue and action and try to lead by example. It’s great to say that we plant trees or recycle, etc. but when it comes down to it, getting your hands dirty or directly enabling someone else to do the same is the way to change things.

woodbaymarshallworkingMarhall working in the wood bay

Why don’t you tell  us a bit about your shop and staff?

The studio is an interesting place – combination workshop, retail showroom, educational space and event location where we participate in the local monthly art walk and showcase local art on our walls. The first thing you see when you walk into our non-descript street entrance in a formerly industrial warehouse district is the workshop immediately to your right, where you’ll likely see my wood man (Marshall Brown) turning wood jewelry and myself in the lapidary bay hand carving stone for custom work. As you progress pass the order filling and jewelry storage areas, you’ll enter the showroom, which looks more like gallery than a retail space. Virtually everything is either bamboo or reclaimed woods. The wall cases are framed in bamboo ply and backlit, and they’re mounted on walls covered in bamboo flooring. The floor displays are bamboo, steel and glass, and the reception area is built from eco-friendly plys, bamboo and trees that died of natural causes or fell during storms. We have a collection of tribal antiquities from around the world on display with the origins of each piece denoted on maps on the wall. There’s a resource library of books and journal articles on those cultures available for research and reference. The space is just as much about education as it is about selling things – from being able to hold the materials and learning why some are or aren’t ideal for your custom project, to learning about the roots of body modification, seeing examples of items we theme our pieces after and being able to come in and read texts about the history of body adornment, jewelry, and man’s connection with this earth. We are here to make the world a better place than it was when we arrived.

My staff is quite small, and we enjoy the marketplace agility and personalized atmosphere that comes from being small and having everyone overlap duties. Myself and Rachel make up the administrative side. Our newest hire Amanda Cleland has been doing a brilliant job holding down the back end with jewelry inventorying, order filling, and other useful tasks, and myself and Marshall are the two jewelry producers in our Richmond workshop. Rachel also switches gears every now and then to hand carve wood items for custom work. We all hold pretty similar views on social and political issues and are all activists in many different facets. We’re all modified in some way and we run the gamut from tattoos and piercings to scarification pieces, scalpel and punch work, you name it. Between the lot of us we have just about everything you could possibly put natural jewelry in, which comes in handy when we’re designing custom work and need to test fit a prototype’s shape or get feedback on design details.

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When did you start offering piercing, and what lead to taking that direction?

We started offering piercing by appointment when we opened the retail showroom in June 2009, and it was because we wanted to be able to show people the right way to do things. There are no 100% legit studios in our city as far as I’m concerned, when it comes to piercing, and particularly jewelry. I am a student of Zak Zito’s absolutely anal retentive feelings about material suitability and freehand work, and Onetribe’s ADORN studio is 100% titanium for initial procedures, with the exception of larger stuff in reputable glass. We started out with a piercer on staff and moved toward having the piercing room available as an asset to piercers, locally or traveling, that can uphold our standards in terms of jewelry and aseptic technique. We take appointments and assign projects to a short list of piercers based on the customer’s needs, and those piercers also take their own appointments and use our space as a safe, clean and professional venue for their own business. Our piercing volume is very low but I am far more concerned with quality over quantity, and piercing is provided as a service to our customers and not our primary focus.

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How is your relationship with other jewelry companies?

Our relationship with other vendors is generally quite well. I’m a big fan of Anatometal and have been known to call and bug Barry about things every now and then. Him and I are also involved with a small group of other vendors in an informal industry business ethics forum where we all discuss copyrights, industry issues, etc. Jason Pfhol (Gorilla Glass) and Ana Paula (Quetzalli) are two people dear to Onetribe and we are working on different collaborative projects with both of them right now. Dy from Ebone Designs is a wonderful friend and aide during my travels in Indonesia and I’ve stayed at his house a few times. He has also donated several Southeast Asian pieces and books to our Eastern antiquities collection. I have talked with Adam at BVLA several times about various collaborative ideas and at one point we made a really beautiful Chiapas amber cabochon for a ring commissioned by one of their clients.

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What does the future have in store for yourself and Onetribe?

Haha, well in the immediate future we’re just looking forward to warmer weather so we can open all of the doors and bays in the studio, and so I can start moving the lapidary setup back outside and make jewelry on the sidewalk again. Great way to make new friends and it’s always a blast when customers stop by to watch. Business wise, we’re hoping to continue growing in a very organic manner (no pun intended), taking on new customers with the help of our current customers and hiring new staff as needed. Into our eighth year and beyond, we are hoping to continue growing our showroom into an educational establishment and we have tossed around the idea of starting a non-profit to manage that aspect of our business and our continuing mission to research, collect artifacts and educate. We have started to completely digitize our antiquities collection with 360 degree views and cultural information and references, and examples of our reproductions, all tagged together in a handy database for people to learn from. This year we will start implementing some ideas we have in regard to getting anthropologists and archeologists into the studio for lectures that customers can attend (and we will hopefully be able to digitize those and add them to our site), and I have plans to teach a ‘primitive’ lapidary workshop where customers can see how ancient cultures turned hard stones such as jadeite into incredible jewelry with simple tools, sand and water, as well as doing knapping (particularly obsidian). I am also considering incorporating some of those original lapidary practices into limited edition custom pieces.

Innovation is what makes our business fun, and we will be constantly coming up with new design and assembly ideas, working in new materials and methods for producing our items and taking on a lot more unique custom work. We have plans to create a Onetribe ‘couture’ line and really go to town on the details when it comes to custom work. The plans include very robust customer back-ends with production photos for each customer’s project, more information and photographs about materials, videos of production and short segments about materials like labradorite, rainbow obsidian and opal that visually benefit from movement. Our goal overall is to create as personalized of an experience as we can for customers shopping on our site – we want it to feel like you’ve walked into the showroom and are talking to us about the things you are seeing. We have no interest in growing to the point where we are mass producing items and getting further removed from our customers – we want them to be more and more involved in the production of the jewelry that they are trusting us to create for their body modification journey.

I personally will be stepping back a little bit from my insane work/production schedule to focus more on anthropology research, and our more elaborate custom work (particularly with stones and ambers). I will definitely be spending more time working with my sustainable urban agriculture non-profit. I’m getting married in May, and if all goes well we will begin a family homestead & small organic farm business with a particular focus on supplying food to those who need it the most. I am also looking forward to more time for ethnobotanical research and the growing and collecting of native and exotic medicinal plants and entheogens, which I believe have played a very important part in human history and may go hand in hand with many of the body modification ceremonies and rituals practiced by cultures around the world.


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