zenithblue: (Default)
zenithblue ([personal profile] zenithblue) wrote2007-07-26 07:03 pm

tattoo part 5 (finis)

When I was very small, I used to love to look at my father's tattoos. They were the grubby blue of a bic pen, a record of time spent in a California jailhouse for crimes never specified. Dad himself had been drunk, and the very large man who insisted upon tattooing him had also been very drunk, and so a number of the tattoos were illegible hieroglyphs. There was a recognizable heart, though, and something that even very young I recognized as either an ankh or a blurred cross. Something about having a visible reminder that my father pre-existed me, that he'd lived through something and it was marked on his flesh, was fascinating for me. It was like one of his elaborate (questionably true) stories of childhood or adolescence, only illustrated.

A few years later, when I entered school, I realized none of my friends' fathers had tattoos of any kind. None of my uncles did either. No other men in my life had ink on their skin. Briefly I wondered what that meant about my family, our place in the world (already precarious enough--by seven I had a hair-trigger understanding of class and felt my own alienation pretty starkly). For a very brief time, I was ashamed of the blurry ink that showed something about us that no one would talk about.

At ten, I encountered a book called Amy's Eyes, and in the first few pages of the story, a struggling tailor deposits his infant daughter at an orphanage so that he might go to sea to earn some money. With her he leaves a doll, the Captain, a sharp-dressed naval captain stitched from bits of cloth. Before Amy's father leaves her, he realizes some part of the Captain seems unfinished:

"One night he had come home after an evening at a public house, singing, drinking, and talking with friends, and it had all of a sudden come upon him that the Captain, then unfinished and with no clothing yet, could use a tattoo. It is an old urge among sailors to want a tattoo, and there is probably more to it than the vanity of being decorated. A tattoo is a token of memory and identity, and it is some small comfort after four months at sea, perhaps, to glance at the name of a loved on bordered around with flowers, or in time of trial to remember the tattooed motto 'Death Before Dishonor,' or when the ship is sinking to think on a graceful script that spells out 'Mother,' or to contemplate, in bitter moments, the picture of a heart thrust through with a dagger. So Amy's father gave the Captain a tattoo on his right forearm...It pictured a needle and thread, and touched in red and blue ink gave indelible notice that this was not a mere sailor before the mast, but a doll to take command high upon the poop deck, a doll of some significance."

The next day I announced to my relatively unsurprised parents that I was going to get lots of tattoos when I grew up. My father tried to tell me little girls didn't get tattoos and I informed him that I wouldn't be a little girl with tattoos, I was going to be a woman with tattoos. And also, I informed him, "Mr. Prison Tatts shouldn't cast any stones."

The tramp stamp on my back was a thing I got after my first round of depressions left me with a bipolar diagnosis. Part of my just liked the celestial motif, and it was simple as that. The symbolism I imparted to it, though, was that the sun contained all the other heavenly creatures within. That all the different phases of the sky were there, encompassed in one symbol. All the different moods. It was a way for me to accept all these shifting selves and sensations.

These days of course I'm a bit more stable. But the tattoo is a reminder of all mutability and all consistency as well: day becomes night, the phases of the moon change, summer edges on into winter, it's always moving but through the same motions. And of course I can't just look down and see it (it's on my back), but I like knowing it's back there, and I like catching glimpses of it when I change or when I get out of the shower. It's enough.


Here is the before picture:


And here is after.
 


As you can see, my ASS IS NOW READY TO FIGHT CRIME.

The shading is awesome, and I'm sad that the picture doesn't pick it up as well as I'd like, but you can get the gist of things. Mikal was really incredible to work with.

I feel like I have a flag above my pantline! Not some jingoistic bit of bullshit, but a geniune flag, a rallying cry/memento of tragedy/marker of triumph. Sure, it's maybe less noble because you can vaguely see my ass crack beneath it, but whatever. I'm very pleased.

I sent my dad pictures first off, of course. He's been wanting to get his prison tatts covered up, but he can't since he's on a bloodthinner.

[identity profile] scribbleeso.livejournal.com 2007-07-27 02:57 am (UTC)(link)
Wow that is really beautiful.

[identity profile] sixcylinders.livejournal.com 2007-07-27 03:03 am (UTC)(link)
Very pretty! Beautiful blue.

[identity profile] prodigal.livejournal.com 2007-07-27 03:29 am (UTC)(link)
Amazing work!

And the canvas it was drawn upon looks rather nice, as well.
librarygrrl: jack o'lantern on gate post, text says Boo. (black dress)

:)

[personal profile] librarygrrl 2007-07-27 03:54 am (UTC)(link)
Awesome!!

[identity profile] infloresence.livejournal.com 2007-07-27 04:14 am (UTC)(link)
Smokin! I really love the darker shading Mika has gone for there. It suits you immensely.

Just another reason why you're blessed hot.

[identity profile] infloresence.livejournal.com 2007-07-27 04:18 am (UTC)(link)
Also, that first par about your father - I really identify with that. I used to feel the exact same way about my father's motorbike crash. His whole left foot had to be reconstructed and as such, it was nobbled and gnarly forever afterward. I used to sit at his feet at night and gently sweep my palm across all the bones and listen as he'd tell the story once again of his stay in hospital and how he'd had to miss playing the lead in Joseph the musical because he was in traction.

[identity profile] deadkytty9.livejournal.com 2007-07-27 04:25 am (UTC)(link)
I love what you've done with the original tatt (as well as the additions). I'm going to show a friend of mine this - she has a star tattoo in the same vicinity that she's been meaning to touch up/add to for a while now.

[identity profile] te-amo-azul.livejournal.com 2007-07-27 05:51 am (UTC)(link)
The stars shine, and they're almost as radiant as the pirate queen. You're my favorite constellation.

[identity profile] scarredbyitall.livejournal.com 2007-07-27 06:19 am (UTC)(link)
Pretty! And you didn't even have to go to prison to get it. I love that you told off your dad and called him, "Mr. Prison Tatts" by the way.

Tramp stamp. . . I have not heard that expression before.

[identity profile] deadkytty9.livejournal.com 2007-07-27 12:34 pm (UTC)(link)
Apparently the German word for 'tramp stamp' translates literally to "ass antlers." This amuses me.

[identity profile] scarredbyitall.livejournal.com 2007-07-28 05:16 am (UTC)(link)
This just gets better and better :D

[identity profile] somethinghead.livejournal.com 2007-07-27 11:14 am (UTC)(link)
Very lovely. I'm not sure if I want to fully color mine anymore. I think perhaps getting the letters filled in and the blades of grass green, but leaving the tombstone unshaded.

My thought for another tattoo that's now occupying my mind is a portrait of Shakespeare on my right arm.

[identity profile] antarcticlust.livejournal.com 2007-07-27 12:23 pm (UTC)(link)
I love it - especially the act of taking a pre-existing image/experience and honoring it along with moving forward with an added design. I love the simultaneous solemnity, joy, stateliness, playfulness, and adventurousness of the flag imagery.

[identity profile] morningsprite.livejournal.com 2007-07-27 12:52 pm (UTC)(link)
that roxors.

My mom got her tattoo when she turned 39, you know. :)

I've always been too indecisive to think about getting something permanent on my body.

[identity profile] decemberthirty.livejournal.com 2007-07-27 11:56 pm (UTC)(link)
Wonderful! That looks great. From a purely aesthetic standpoint, I love the deep blue and the negative-space stars. I'll have to show this picture to Ms. E--she has a tattoo of stars in the shape of the constellation Cassiopeia, and she's always been a little disappointed that the artist didn't do a better job with it. Perhaps this will give her some ideas of how to do a bit more with her celestial theme.

[identity profile] kiwikat.livejournal.com 2007-07-28 02:05 am (UTC)(link)
i really like the shading on that, it's very well done.

[identity profile] lagizma.livejournal.com 2007-07-30 10:25 pm (UTC)(link)
I like the tattoo better now than before.

I'd never seen it before, of course, but the before is just good, and the after is like WOW, ZOMG! The shading shows up well in the picture, so I can't imagine how good it is in person.

It's as if the before tattoo could have been copied from a book, which isn't bad, but just so-so, and the after tatoo is for sure, the-real-zenithblue-thing.

[identity profile] lagizma.livejournal.com 2007-07-30 10:27 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, also, you've done exactly what I want to do, which extend my tramp stamp a bit. Mine's a black tribal that isn't very wide, and I wanted to make it more flowy. Your flowiness inspires me.

[identity profile] helpimarock.livejournal.com 2007-07-31 09:24 pm (UTC)(link)
I jumped right to the pic of the tattoo, but going back and reading your story within a story was so worthwhile. Reading about your history of tattoos seriously made me look at my own plans in a different perspective. I think I've been getting too hung up on coming up with a design that's completely unique while remaining attractive and "cool". And now I realize I need and want to integrate more symbolism about who I am and what I've been through opposed to just creating a design that is a tangible sample of my creativity and imagination.

Anyway, about your tattoo...

Wicked awesome! The shading over the original ink makes it at least three times as cool. And all the new work imparts three-dimensionality and even movement to the whole thing. It looks alive! The darker blue (which is my favorite color, btw) struck me as different at first, but it's actually perfect b/c it keeps the sun in the foreground.