A black-and-white photo of a person mid-air in a Superman-style body suspension pose, supported by multiple hooks in their back and legs, smiling joyfully toward the camera. They are suspended horizontally in a large indoor space with high ceilings and visible rigging. A group of onlookers—some seated, some standing—watch with expressions of admiration, amusement, and support. The atmosphere is lively and communal, capturing a moment of shared experience and transformation.
  • A Mantis Piercing Trend?

    I love that whenever an odd piercing that works aesthetically is done, there are always a rapid-fire set of them that follow around the world. First we saw the ones from Massimo Cortese in Naples (who dubbed it the “Mantis”), and then not long afterward Pauly got them from Mateo Way (calling his “The Devil’s Threeway”), and now Luis Garcia has done a set, calling them simply “forward facing nostrils”. These are pictured here.

    luisg-nostrils

    Brian Skellie reminded me that his wife Sandrine has had these piercings for over a decade (self-done), which I should have remembered when I met her back then here in Toronto (Caitlin is still mad at me because I let them smoke in my house but not her). Sandrine’s are the oldest that I can think of in the modern piercing scene. Each of these individuals wears the piercings slightly differently. Pauly and the Greek client fit them into a collection of very heavy facial work, Luis’s client balances them off of a pair of high nostrils, and Sandrine makes them work with the daintiest of beads — actually 1.5mm diamonds from NeoMetal. You wouldn’t think that such an odd piercing would be so aesthetically successful, but it is.

    sandrine-nostrils

    It should be noted that this piercing also has a solid pedigree in a number of indigenous societies.


  • The Metal Moko

    To be clear, Samppa had nothing to do with that title, and in fact, I think actually officially calling this jewelry anything like that would be culturally insensitive. But it does remind me quite a lot of the look of many neo-tribal tattoos so the name sprung to mind instantly. In any case, this is a custom piece of nostril jewelry bent to shape by Samppa von Cyborg, currently on a world tour (the dates of which you can read at the bottom of his recent article on transdermal implant design) if you’re looking for work by him. It is held in place by pressure, with the inside of the jewelry being very much like a normal nostril screw. To be honest, anyone with some needle nosed pliers and some wire could have a lot of fun coming up with all sorts of related designs!

    cybernostrilfixed


  • Head to Fist

    Here’s a new name for Modblog: Alex Blakan.  Alex is a Spanish modification artist that works out of Clandestine Body Art in Bilbao, Spain.  He’s also responsible for some pretty impressive implants, like this skull that you see below.


  • The Bees?? Not the Bees!!!

    Yes.  You’re getting the bees.  And the flowers.  And even a dragonfly.

    Tattoo by Sean Ambrose from Arrows and Embers in Concord, NH.


  • Don’t wake me when it’s over

    Now this was a tattoo that I could have never predicted.  Back in October I was a little surprised to see a Lifehouse tattoo in the music tattoo galleries.  Like I mentioned then, I don’t have anything against Lighthouse, but they’re just not a band you think of when someone says “I’ve got a band tattoo”.  Well, the original was a great piece of lettering by Marcin Liana from Alien, located in Dąbrowa Górnicza, Poland.

    It turns out Marcin wasn’t finished with just this, and has since expanded it to become an amazing abstract typography sleeve.

    For those curious, that’s IAM: Kornik in the photos.


  • All bent into shape

    It looks like Joeltron has gotten his hands on some kind of jewelry erector set, as he continues to upload these incredible ear projects.  Who knows what he’ll come up with next.


  • Lost Soul

    Here are a pair of wonderful black and white portraits of Will Powel taken by Daniel Milbourn of Meantime Photography (facebook.com/mean.times.1 and flickr.com/photos/meantimes/) in Inglewood, California. You can zoom in on the picture of Will’s hands with a click.

    daniel-milbourn-photo-1

    daniel-milbourn-photo-2

    Edit: After initially posting this entry, I saw another wonderful modified person portrait by Daniel Milbourn that I wanted to feature as well. This is a picture of Dom Short who has quite an amazing and unique tattoo on his face. I should also add that limited edition framed and unframed prints are available, and you can contact Daniel directly if you’re interested in purchasing them — they would look amazing decorating tattoo and piercing studios (as well as homes and other businesses).

    dom


  • Dr. Paul Y. Unstoppable, MD

    This will help you understand why doctors are notorious for messy handwriting. It’s because it’s not actually handwriting. It’s facewriting, or if we are to speak with the proper Latin term that doctors prefer, nostrilphiltrumlowbretwriting, which is difficult for even the most talented of calligrapher to do well.

    nostrilseptumphiltrumlowbretwriting


  • Foreheadmageddon

    Oh, Joeltron…

    joeltron1

    Keep reading after the break to see exactly how this contraption was installed.

    Hopefully enough people had the momentary whimsy of not realizing that was a photoshop job on the jewelry? Side note; I sure do love Joeltron’s eyeball tattoo by the way — the bright green that both he and now Eva Medusa have (gosh I love that when I post on ModBlog, rather than just on Facebook, I can actually easily find old entries and link to them!!!) is such a great colour for eyeballs. Now if we could only figure out how to do mirrored eyes…

    Anyway, what you’re actually looking at is the jewelry that Joeltron (firstblood.com.au and joeltron.com) used on Sally Hacket’s ear, one of his chaotic and technological trondustrials. They’re a bit of a love it or hate it aesthetic I think, with some people seeing them as neo-cyberpunk masterpieces, and other people seeing them as the earwork version of a scribble. In this case he built the jewelry out of an Industrial Strength connecty bit, Anatometal hearts and barbells, and “lots of joiny doo-dads and miscellaneous bits”. If you look carefully you can see the divets where the pieces all connect. Unlike most industrials of this type, Joeltron builds out of smaller components joined together to make a larger whole, rather than bending a single long bar into a complex shape — this technique adds to the high-tech sci-fi look that he’s going for I think (zoom for a closer look).

    joeltron2


  • “You’ve come a long way, baby”

    When you compare Mechanical Demon (tattoo artist at Harness in Helsinki, Finland) from 2007 to 2012, you can really see what an improvement the jump from tattooed and pierced person to full heavy-mod enthusiast has made. In addition to some more tattoo work, I can also see that he’s added some sternum implants, a pair of transdermal implant spike horns, radical ear pointing and I think lobe removal, as well as black eyeball tattoos. Really checked off that wish list quite successfully, didn’t he?

    mechanical-demon-1

    You can zoom that picture but the others in this entry are at full size. Anyway, to no small part because of his striking and eye-catching appearance he’s had the opportunity to model for some great photographers, but one shoot that really struck me was this amazing photo by Tinttu Henttonen, with make-up by Mia Magia. Click here for a close-up that shows his ear very nicely — the reshaping work that was done on it is quite something.

    mechanical-demon-2

    Another photo I liked was this old-time portrait, which also shows his mods nicely and reveals one that I’d missed in the first photo, a set of subdermal horns higher up the scalp, a placement that works very nicely with his transdermal spikes (but might otherwise look odd on its own).

    mechanical-demon-3