An Examination Of Alternatives To Professional Tattoo Supplies Article An Examination Of Alternatives To Professional Tattoo Supplies Article
    home | all categories | submit articles | about us | links | link to us | site map | contact us | recommended resources
 
Home » Articles » Culture and Society » art » An Examination Of Alternatives To Professional Tattoo Supplies

An Examination Of Alternatives To Professional Tattoo Supplies


By Shaun Parker

An Examination Of Alternatives To Professional Tattoo Supplies

Professional tattoo supplies is a competitive market segment and synonymous with the tattooing process in contemporary society today. Marking the skin with permanent ink is a tradition 5000 years old however has only in recent years made a move into socially acceptable parts of society.

There are still certain stigmas surrounding tattoos as they are traditionally associated with certain social demographics such as criminals, the military and ideological groups. It was representative in Western culture with the class gap, being associated with the lower classes, thankfully a prejudice that is being lifted to a certain extent.

Advances in professional tattoo supplies and innovative designs displayed by popular culture icons have improved the image of tattoos. They are now considered a more socially acceptable art form however there are still some uses of tattoos that have real stigma around them. These types of tattoos will not be performed in reputable studios with professional tattoo supplies.

Any images that are associated with prison, gang, football violence or extreme ideologies will not be accommodated by reputable tattoo studios. This means that other methods not involving professional tattoo supplies are used to create the tattoo. This includes the stick-and-poke method which is generally associated with the prison tat, or prison tattoo.

This method is performed with ink, a needle and thread. The needle continually pierces the skin with an ink-soaked piece of thread on the tip. The thread keeps the needle continually covered in ink to ensure the level of ink penetrating the skin remains constant. The major issue when not using professional tattoo supplies is one of hygiene, as the equipment is not sterilized correctly and the risk of blood poisoning, infections or blood transmitted diseases such as HIV or Hepatitis.

Tattoos such as tears below the eye are popular prison tattoos create via this method. They are rumoured to represent how many murders the individual has committed. Other tattoos associated with stick-and-poke are gang tattoos, the expression get your ink is associated with affiliating oneself with a gang either in prison or on the street.

Traditional Japanese tattoos are not made with professional tattoo supplies as the west understands it. They are made by hand with a needle and full body tattoos are associated with the Yakuza, otherwise known as the Japanese mafia. Many bathhouses and gyms ban anyone with these tattoos to keep out any unwanted element.

Professional tattoo supplies play an essential role in maintaining hygiene standards in western tattoo culture. The modern machine used was derived from a design by Thomas Edison initially intended for use in engraving. A man named Samuel O'Reilly adapted the machine in 1891 to administer ink to the skin and the mechanism was based on a rotary system, now professional tattoo supplies used a system based on electromagnets.

The electromagnets drive a group of soldered needles into the skin anywhere between 80 to 150 times per second applying ink which in professional tattoo supplies uses a variable range of needle depth. This has transformed the modern process into a precise art form and professional tattoo supplies have raised the level of hygiene involved.



About the author

Shaun Parker is a supplier of safe professional tattoo supplies and has years of experience as an artist. from http://www.FreeArticlesAndContent.com

Copy This Article For FREE!!!

You can use this article and copy it on your own website for free! All you have to do is make sure the article is copied with no changes and includes the "About The Author" text. Also please ensure that all url's are hyperlinked according. Thank you.

Link To This Article - And We'll Link Back To Your Website!

You are more then welcome to link to this article! All you have to do is copy this webpage address from the address bar and create a link on your website. Please use the title of this article for your link text. Please get in contact once you have linked to this article and we'll link back to you! Thank you.
 
Other great articles from this category...


Do You Know Who Van Gogh Is?
Saturday, 22nd November 2008

What Do You Know About Van Gogh?
Saturday, 22nd November 2008

Make the Most of Stencils
Wednesday, 19th November 2008

The reverence of Praying Hands Tattoos
Monday, 17th November 2008

Painting Pictures With Water
Monday, 17th November 2008

Fred Astaire Portrait
Sunday, 16th November 2008

Jazz Influences images
Sunday, 16th November 2008

Jazz Influence and Fashion
Sunday, 16th November 2008

Black and White Prints
Sunday, 16th November 2008

MBT Shoes
Sunday, 16th November 2008


Related Sites





Free Articles

Unsecured Credit Card Application   Free Proxy   Motorola MotoPEBL   Dog Training
Copyright © 2005-2008 Your Marketing Ltd. All Rights Reserved