Rules    FAQ
User: Guest ( Register )
 
 
 

It is currently Wed Jan 22, 2025 12:18 am (All times are UTC - 5 hours [ DST ])




Forum locked This topic is locked, you cannot edit posts or make further replies.  [ 4 posts ] 
Author Message
 Post subject: Tattoo coloring question
PostPosted: Thu May 14, 2009 7:38 pm 
User avatar
Plug
Plug

Joined: Tue Jun 26, 2007 10:19 am
Location: Maryland
For those of you who know about tattoos, when putting something new over an old tattoo with a bright color like red, does it matter what the color of the new tat is? Would a new blue color look purple or white look pinkish or would the new color pigment just cover the first color no matter what? So white would be white regardless of what the original color was.

_________________
:hijm70:


Top
 Profile Customs Feedback / Brawlingness  
 
 Post subject: Re: Tattoo coloring question
PostPosted: Thu May 14, 2009 9:18 pm 

Joined: Tue Jun 26, 2007 10:19 am
Location: Eastern PA
Not totally sure on this...but I believe the cover up tat has to be darker than the original. Speaking not from experience...but I do remember the term "blacking out" an old tat.

My tattoo artist was pretty wise with his words: "Don't look at this as an accessory...but as a marriage, as it will be with you for life. Keeping that in mind....remember at some point you will be 50 yrs old with the same tat...so choose wisely."


Top
 Profile Customs Feedback / Brawlingness  
 
 Post subject: Re: Tattoo coloring question
PostPosted: Thu May 14, 2009 11:23 pm 
User avatar
Formerly JFAK075

Joined: Tue Jun 26, 2007 10:19 am
Location: Hawthorne, New Jersey
They can remove or just fade the original. Then add the new tatt. Shouldn't be a big deal.

_________________
Check out End of Days- an ongoing Diorama-Story set in the zombie apocalypse.
http://keenansendofdays.blogspot.com/

My customs- http://s1069.photobucket.com/albums/u468/keenan42/


Top
 Profile Customs Feedback / Brawlingness  
 
 Post subject: Re: Tattoo coloring question
PostPosted: Sun May 17, 2009 4:40 pm 
User avatar
The Thread Assassin.

Joined: Sun Sep 23, 2007 8:12 pm
Location: Savannah, Ga
Speaking from experience, in order to "cover" an old tattoo, it is always best to go with darker colors over lighter colors for a couple of reasons-

Light colors always fade first. White pigments dont cover anything, even skin tone, very well to begin with, and they can vanish from the tattoo in months.

You are basically inserting the new pigment into the same space the old pigment occupies, and you are essentially reopening the original wound, exposing the old pigment. The colors don't really blend, say white pigment over red making pink; instead, you get mottled red/white/hollow. Blue over red gives you really dark, blotchy blue. This happens because the lighter the color, the smaller the pigment. The smaller the pigment, the easier it is for the systems within the skin to break them up and subsume them, and these systems always go for the easiest targets first. (This is one of the reasons why you use salves on tattoos while they heal, and why tattoo artists push for the use of natural salves like A+D ointment or lanolin based lotions versus Vaseline or bacitracin- in addition to keeping the tattoo moisturized to speed healing, it also gives your skin something to attack other than the pigment, giving the pigment a better chance to reside in the skin until it is sealed in by healed skin.) In any case, some of the old pigment goes, some of the new pigment goes, and in spots all of the pigment goes. I've actually seen an artist load up white pigment into a tattoo in which the black shading "bled" to blue haze, and when it healed, the haze was gone, and the white went with it.

Also, when you are doing the original tattoo, the process that you use to color is actually the reverse of what you would use for coloring an illustration on paper; tattooists go dark to light. Dark colors go in first, then light, then lightest, then pigmented highlights. The reason is because the darker colors show through the lighter colors, so shading in colors can be accomplished in the skin in initial tattoos. However, on "coverups" what you get is fuzzy, broken black or bluish lines showing through the color where you've gone over initial line work or black shading. When covering, you try to integrate the original line work and shading into black areas or the darkest colors of the new tattoo.

Incedentally, Wrecking Balm does not remove all the pigment from your skin, and lasers do, but leave hard to observe scarring in the skin that precludes successful healing of a new tattoo in the area. Scar tissue also makes tattoos hurt MUCH worse.


Top
 Profile Customs Feedback / Brawlingness  
 
Display posts from previous:  Sort by  
Forum locked This topic is locked, you cannot edit posts or make further replies.  [ 4 posts ] 

It is currently Wed Jan 22, 2025 12:18 am (All times are UTC - 5 hours [ DST ])


Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 61 guests


You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot post attachments in this forum

Powered by phpBB © 2000, 2002, 2005, 2007 phpBB Group