Saturday, May 17, 2014

Cover Up And Miami Ink Tattoos

By Darren Hartley


The result of getting tattooed is the tattoo ink getting dispersed under the skin about a millimetre deep. It stays in a layer under the epidermis, the visible skin layer, referred to as the dermis. Inking a cover up tattoo over an existing tattoo is not actually replacing the existing tattoo. Instead, the pigments of the two tattoos, the old and the new, are mixed.

It is important to carefully plan what the design of the cover up tattoo will be. Cover up here actually means hiding an old tattoo instead of pounding black ink over the top to replace it. A good camouflage does not require areas of solid blank ink to cover an old tattoo.

There is a good approach to designing your cover up tattoo. It involves drawing a design using the shapes of the old tattoo. A copy of the old tattoo is placed on a tracing paper or acetate with the use of a sharpie or skin marker. The copy is then placed on a light table and a clean paper sheet is placed on top of it. The various options for the cover up design are then drawn on the clean sheet over the copy of the old tattoo.

Miami ink tattoos consist of a unique tattoo design available on the internet. The process of getting one consists of four simple steps, signing up on their website, choosing a design from 25,000 designs offered on the website, saving the chosen design onto your computer and printing it out.

People who are extremely choosy about body art are the target audience for Miami ink tattoos. These people look at tattoos as not just literal or universal objects. They see something more personal and quite complicated in them. This is because for them tattoos are visual representations of an idea that was created in the head. This idea is an expression of how one sees himself or how one wants to share his passion with the outside world.




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