Tattoo Designs and Their Meanings

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Tribal

These designs are black silhouettes. Most are based on ancient tribal designs. A popular modern mutation of this style is to modify a traditional design so that it appears to be tribal. Many of the most popular styles are modelled after the ancient styles of the South Pacific Islands. These tattoos are usually abstract, artistic representations that consist of a combination of discrete design elements such as spikes swirls and spines.

Emulate images in colours

Tribal tattoos are often designed to fit or accentuate a specific part of the body. For example, a tribal tattoo might snake along the contours of the lower back. Realistic. These designs are usually portraits or landscapes that mimic the fine detail of a photograph. Mostly they are done in black and white as it takes a master tattoo artist to emulate images in colours. Sometimes this style is also called photo-realism.

Oriental

Usually, the oriental style of tattooing involves using the entire body as a canvas rather than adding a single image here and. Images are used to weave a story or a myth on an entire armour over the entire back. Usually, this is very fanciful, bold, yet detailed colour work. Big murals of dragons, flowers, fish, and other animals are the most common oriental tattoos.

Japanese perspective

A dominant image such as a dragon might be surrounded by “fill work” that consists of artistic, fluid-like swirls of colour. The oriental tattoo often follows the rules of the Japanese perspective in painting that is concerned with symmetry and balance. Also, the symbols in a Japanese tattoo often have deeper meanings. For instance, a tattoo of a carp represents wealth and prosperity.

Celtic

These silhouette style tattoos have thick bold black lines, and sharp angle. A Viking offshoot of the Celtic style includes mythological creatures such as gryphons. They are primarily completed in black ink only. Because they are difficult to do, Celtic tattoos are often best created by an artist who specializes in the style of Celtic tattoos.

Biomechanical

These tattoos often depict machinery intertwined with human flesh. A typical biomechanical tattoo work might depict a human hand, arm, or chest tangled with pieces of machinery such as screws, wheels, or and pulleys. The result is an image of a creature that looks half-robot, half-human.

This type of tattoo is inspired by movies such as “Alien.”

Traditional

This style of tattoo refers to work that features bold black outlines and pitch-black shading contrasted with very bright colours. The style is thought to have its origins on military bases in the 1930s and 1940s.

Fine line

These delicate tattoos are very detailed and usually associated with black and grey work. A fine line is also often used to express a realistic depiction of an image. Fine line images cannot be too complicated as sometimes over time the image can degenerate into a blotch or a shadow.

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