People I finally got new ink. I shared about my first tattoo back in 2011, based on a fabric I bought in the UK, and in that post I said I would get a little butterfly added.
WELL, it only took 13 years to get the next instalment and what a beauty!
My friend Ria is a costumier who has worked on movies from the Hobbit to Avatar, but now her artistic expression is via tattooing. I asked her to design a shoulder piece based upon William Morris' Strawberry thief. I absolutely adore the cheeky birds, the strawberries and flowers and the curling stylised leaf patterns.
To make a coherent outtake, Ria took the top birds and turned them to face each other. She then isolated a bunch of the pattern around it into a design that I fell hard for immediately.It is quite detailed and complex, and we played with lots of colour - the range of ink colours available now is enormous, far more than in 2011.
This beautiful design took 20 hours over three sessions to complete. I love it so very much! |
I couldn't stop looking at it! And a few months after it was completed, I went back for butterflies, a tidy up of Nev's 2011 work, and another I'll show you further down.
Still in the chair, three little periwinkle butterflies to help tie the old and the new together |
Now to be honest, I want my butterflies bigger. Maybe we'll do that this year. But I am SO happy with my growing collection of strawberry related tattoos. Which is quite funny as I'm not a massive strawb fan, given how tasteless they usually are these days. But they are VERY pretty.
And lastly on the same day as the butterflies, I got a wedding ring.
I adore the Husband and it has been 20 years together, and in that time I've had my wedding ring reduced in size and let out again, but although I still love it, it annoys the heck out of me. As I get older my sensory issues have gotten worse and I find it so uncomfortable. But I also do not like going without.
So, borrowing an idea from a young friend, I got a finger tattoo.
It bears no resemblance to my actual ring, and fingers are hard, so it had to be simple. So this tiny heart is now a permanent symbol.
So there you have it! Am I done? Heck no! I am planning a tattoo for my right arm, some kind of scissor and flowers combination to sort of riff on my late father's dagger and snake one. It was pretty awful, that weird bluey green we associate with old school tattoos, he would have got it in about 1953. But it was a part of him and I like the idea of a blade that I use all the time, and something feminine like flowers. Possibly done as if they are embroidered. Not sure yet. Any inspirations are welcome!
Anyone else taken the plunge into body art?
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