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What Does it Take to Design a Tattoo by Carsten Maglekaer
Have you ever considered what it takes to design a tattoo? Have you ever wanted to design your own tattoo? Maybe you think you have what it takes to be a tattoo designer? All these questions can and will be answered in the following paragraphs.
Artistry
Posted on the walls of hundred of tattoo shops in the world, are predesigned pictures ready to be inked on your skin. Equally static are the picture books, usually containing the same boring designs found on the walls of tired tattoo galleries. If you really want to find quality in your artist, you will be able to peruse as portfolio of hand picked favorites, chosen by the artist. Any self-respecting artist has a range of their proudest works available to look over.
Integrity
Many designers never thought hey would be in the world of tattoos. They spent their lives doodling on papers, drawing for recreation, or even tucked away in the office of some architecture or advertising firm. The tattoo bug bit them and they transformed into creators of living art tattoo patterns. Real tattoo artists, like any artist, hone and polish their skills. They go to trade shows and compare their works against other artists. They research those that came before them, as well as the fine-tuning methods that help to create body art that pops off the skin. Artists with integrity will never do a tattoo on a drunken person or someone too young. They must have ethics. They use the cleanest and most hygienic tools and practices.
Vision
If you walk into a tattoo shop, you may find several artists working in conjunction. Like members on a sports team, there are always weaker and stronger players. A quality artist will help to improve the work of younger or lesser artists. A careful search through the different portfolios of each artist will help you see which one has the greatest vision. Some artists specialize in a specific motif. An artist might be famous for portrait tattoos, while another may be know for extraordinary Dragon Tattoos. One guy might be credited with Japanese tattoo perfection, and one girl will blow you away with her lotus flower power. The main point to recognize in this is that each of these artists has vision. They possess clarity in exactly what type of tattoo niche they want to offer.
Confidence
As in any trade, if the artist does not have confidence, then they will eventually fall along the wayside. To design tattoos, one must trust their ability to draw or sketch. They must be able to see things that other artists do not. They have to explore the old and the new and the literal and the abstract. Above all, they have to present their ideas and works as professional, and be ready to stand behind their artistic choices. Otherwise they will be pushed into designing tattoos that no one else wants to do, and that is tragic.
Copyright (c) 2011 Carsten Maglekaer
Tattoo design is a matter for professionals. On www.magletattoo.com there is a collection of tattoo designs, review of tattoo designers, books and much more.
Article Source: http://www.earticlesonline.com/Article/What-Does-it-Take-to-Design-a-Tattoo/1233188
How do you draw/sketch tattoos on paper?
Are you talking about creating a design on paper for a tatoo? If so, you start with a simple line drawing in pencil on a very smooth paper, like hot press or hotplate bristol. Use a 1B or B pencil, or maybe something alittle harder, like an H pencil (graphite)--you get these in the art supply section of your local craft store. Then you can draw over that with either a fine line permanent marker (test it on a scrap of the same paper to make sure the ink doesn't bleed a thicker line than you want--also you may want to ventilate the room if you use it for more than a few minutes, as the fumes can be toxic), or use a really good quality ball point pen. You should know, though, that ball-point pen ink will eventually bleed alittle and soak through the paper. Also, if you want to get rid of the pencil lines, use the permanent marker, because the ball-point pen will smear. Let the marker dry overnight before you try to erase the pencil lines. Use a grey kneaded eraser to erase the pencil. [It's called a kneaded eraser because you have to knead it, pull it, stretch it, twist it and wad it up again. This softens it and makes it useable, and also works the graphite into it if it gets smudgey-thick on the surface of the eraser.] Failing the hot press/plate paper, just use a heavy weight good quality typing or printing paper.
If you are talking about making a desing on paper that can then be transfered to the skin like a decal tatoo--I don't really know, but Caran d'Ache (pronounced: Karon dawsh) is a brand of art materials that makes water soluable color pencils and crayons/pastels that could be used in this way. Look them up at an art supply website, or at your local craft store. The manufacturer will also have a website with ideas about how to use these products.