#37379
bmore
Participant
@bmore

Hey all, I was hoping to get a little feedback on a tattoo idea. The design:

http://ampersandampersand.tumblr.com/post/1675314604/grant-deco

(yeah, journalist nerd wants an ampersand tattooed on him)

So, it’s essential that the proportions are correct, since typography is pretty anal with proportion. My first question is: assuming I don’t enlarge it too too much (thinking of the underside of my bicep), do you think this design is too tiny/detailed to be executed properly?

Second question: I was thinking of having it done in orange against a dark blue rectangle (scooped corners) for some “pop”. Would that help or add to any issues with its precise detail?

I’ve been cruising the forums for a while, and so I see plenty of high detail tattoos, but they’re usually in a sort of free form flowing awesomeness, and as I said this should be pinpoint exact awesomeness.

Does all this make sense? Any feedback/tips would be massively appreciated.

Best,
Andrew

#110330
Wardy
Participant
@wardy

Welcome to the forum Andrew.

I really can’t see why a tattoo artist shouldn’t be able to do your idea it seems quiet simple to me but there a lot more experienced people than me on here but personally i think that just be a relatively easy job 🙂

#110332
bmore
Participant
@bmore

thanks for the quick feedback! if it’s apparent, total newb here with nothing but pastiness on my skin.

#110333
Wardy
Participant
@wardy
bmore;94621 wrote:
thanks for the quick feedback! if it’s apparent, total newb here with nothing but pastiness on my skin.

We’ve all been there buddy, once you get your tattoo you will want another 🙂

#110334
msmercury
Participant
@msmercury

Hey Andrew, welcome to the forum. I’ll leave the experts to answer your questions. However, I can’t see any reason why you can’t get the tattoo you want by a good competent artist. 🙂 🙂

#110336
bmore
Participant
@bmore

thank you kindly msmercury! 🙂

#110341
Hylland
Participant
@hylland

The problem with doing it orange with a dark blue background is that you need to leave enough room between parallel dark areas. You need maybe 3mm at least between the blue areas so even your thicker bars are pushing the limit. The thin line down the middle is a big problem. I’m not saying it can’t be done, but there is a certain amount of sub-dermal ink spreading that happens during the healing and very slowly after the healing. even if it was crisp when it was first finished, you’d have problems by the two week mark. From there it wouldn’t get any better, just slowly worse.

#110343
bmore
Participant
@bmore

Yeah, I was thinking the problem would be something along those lines. The diamonds in particular. I’m definitely planning on enlarging it. Maybe 2x as large? I don’t want it too big, though.

#110344
bmore
Participant
@bmore

do you think it would be better as just black, with no background?

#110346
Hylland
Participant
@hylland

without a doubt. The problem is coming from reversing it.

#110347
bmore
Participant
@bmore

ok, that makes a lot of sense. do you have a rough idea on—if I stubbornly stick with the orange on blue color scheme—how much larger (than as it appears now) should it be to prevent bleeding/keep bleeding to a minimum?

#110356
buttwheat
Participant
@buttwheat

Totally doable At twice the size. It is pretty amazing what a great tattooist can do.

#110373
Hylland
Participant
@hylland

To do it bright Orange with a dark blue background you probably want it big enough that the thin middle line of the design is a couple of millimeters wide. It could be done the size it is, and it may even make it through the healing alright, but we’re talkin the rest of your life for skin to move and blur things. Twice as big would be better but still pushing it. Dark blue on an Orange background would work better, maybe with a fancy bark blue border on the orange background. Even then I’d say 50% bigger would be best.

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