iratollah wrote:Is it safe to bet that Leviticus 19:28 is not one of the verses you chose?dukesean wrote:For me, I prefer tattoos of Bible verses. Sounds ironic huh?
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Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
iratollah wrote:Is it safe to bet that Leviticus 19:28 is not one of the verses you chose?dukesean wrote:For me, I prefer tattoos of Bible verses. Sounds ironic huh?
Oh trust me I went through all the rationale esp with respect to Lev 19:28.The Annoyed Man wrote:iratollah wrote:Is it safe to bet that Leviticus 19:28 is not one of the verses you chose?dukesean wrote:For me, I prefer tattoos of Bible verses. Sounds ironic huh?I was wondering if someone was going to mention that one.
Abraham wrote:carlson1
Doing it for work?
Were you or are you a tattoo artist and doing such was/is a form or advertisement?
I appreciate it's none of my business, and I understand if you care not to respond, but I am curious. Lest I sound outside the realm of such things I'm not.
I have a rather large, custom, fine line tattoo, done by Kari Barba, tattoo artist par excellence, that, after many years, remain glad I had done. Like the positioning of yours, it's not one for public display.
I must say I feel saddened for those wishing they'd not made the choice of something so (for the most part anyway) permanent. I took over a year to decide on what I wanted and went through quite a bit of work to make it happen. I was in my forties at the time and given the time it took and my age at the time I did it, I've no regrets. In fact, I'm quite proud of it.
On a side note: A lot of folks, when criticized about tattoos or being punctured, generally state in a rather pained manner, that it's their form of self-expression. (when I hear this, I can't help but roll my eyes - what a very large, all-encompassing, please let me out of jail garbage that expression is...)
Me, I have no clue why I wanted a tattoo. Still don't. Even more intriguing to myself, was the fact I'd always considered tattoos as something rather low class, repulsive even. The idea of getting one just came to me in mid-life and I worked on the idea to it's final fruition. Perhaps, given the time I put into it prior to making it happen and my somewhat advanced age, I still deem the decision a good one. The quality of the art work is exceptional.
I'll bet you a $1000 suppressor that you'd regret selling real estate on your body for some company logo eventually....WarHawk-AVG wrote:Well there was a silencer company offering a $1000 free supressor if you got thier company logo tatood on your body..thier Molon Labe tatoo was pretty spiffy too!
I think its too late for the silencer though
I know the folks who might find you will appreciate that (seriously). Please make sure and take some good pictures and leave them with your next of kin.Cutter wrote:The good news is that it will make it easy to identify my body no matter how little of it is left. (Dark humor.)
carlson1 wrote:I don't mine the questions. In the 80's would spent 14 years in Narcotis for the State Police. I though I had to fit it. The tatoos the cutf of shirts, beard, earrings, etc. . . I spent 14 years doing that with a joint DEA task force. It was the worst 14 years I had in my LEO career. Now I have retired and a Baptist Preacher! I am glad I can hid some of them now.