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.
  • ModBlog News of the Week: August 19th, 2011

    This week’s news post is going to be a short one.  It seems that there wasn’t a lot going on around the world this week, at least in terms of body modification.  That said, there are still a couple of stories for your reading enjoyment.

    First up this week is Q&A with the author of Breastfeeding In Combat Boots, Robyn Roche-Paul.  This particular interview is target to women with nipple piercings who are worried about breastfeeding when they have children.

    So if a woman wants a nipple piercing, should she worry that eventually she’ll want to breastfeed, and this’ll screw things up?

    Robyn Roche-Paull: No. Chances are, she’ll be fine. Repeated piercings sometimes create scar tissue that can block milk ducts, but in general, a clean piercing by a reputable, professional piercer shouldn’t cause issues. Anecdotally, I have found that breastfeeding is not affected by established nipple piercings. However, some moms do find that they leak, copiously, due to the extra holes in the nipples … and some babies can find the extra flow difficult to manage. But nothing that isn’t manageable by breast pads and some positioning changes.

    Will a nursing mother have to take the piercing out when she breastfeeds?

    I would recommend that, yes. A baby could choke on a piece of jewelry if it comes apart. It can also cause mouth sores in the baby and harbor bacteria. The mom can take it out for each feeding, or just take it out for the duration of her breastfeeding. She can also use flexible Teflon jewelry while she’s breastfeeding.

    The interview goes on to talk about when it’s a good time to get pierced if you’re planning a family.

    There’s a few more stories to come, so just click the read more button to see the rest.

    Next up, we head over to New Jersey where a group of students have come up with a way to use tattoos as a means of creating permanent empathy.

    If typical internship activities include filing and making coffee, Stephanie Krivitzky’s 10 weeks with the BBH Barn were anything but orthodox.  The 22-year-old native of Montclair, N.J., dreamed up The Social Tattoo Project with fellow interns Jenn Huang and Haywood Watkins III. The three were tasked with a very brief mission: “Change perception famously.”

    “We wanted to focus on changing perception, because we figured if we had a good idea we’d become famous anyway,” Krivitzky told The Huffington Post. They decided to focus on apathy and the expiration of empathy. Noticing that issues that remained pressing, such as the humanitarian crisis unfolding in Haiti, were no longer a part of the American consciousness, they set about finding a way to create a sense of permanent concern. The first five topics they chose to center on were the aftermath of Haiti’s earthquake, the Japan earthquake and tsunami, the Norway bombings, human trafficking and poverty.

    Once the topics were chosen, the group sought out volunteers who would agree to get a tattoo that they had never seen. The tattoos would serve as a permanent mark of empathy for the victims of the five crises.

    The Social Tattoo Project has inked five people, the themes of which were selected via voting on Twitter when followers would use hashtags to vote for a subject and the most popular subject would be the focus of the next tattoo. These tattoos cost them the entirety of their $1,000 budget from BBH. Sacred Tattoo in New York City provided the group with a 50 percent discount, which Krivitzky said saved the project.

    I guess if they did this to become famous, it sort of worked.  I can’t fault them for trying to remind people that just because the media decided a story wasn’t worth following any more, it doesn’t make the people affected by it go away.

    Scientists in The Netherlands have developed a synthetic skin combining human cells and spider silk.  This new type of skin is the first generation of what they hope will become bulletproof human skin that can be grafted onto soldiers.

    A Dutch team created a piece of “bulletproof” skin from special, U.S.-made spider silk and human skin cells and found that it indeed can repel bullets — as long as they’re not traveling too fast.  The bulletproof skin showed its superiority over normal human skin by stopping a bullet fired at a reduced speed. But it fell short of surviving a shot at normal speed from a .22 caliber rifle, the benchmark for protection for a Type 1 bulletproof vest.

    The special brand of spider silk came from genetically modified goats and worms at Utah State University in Logan. U.S. researchers have spent years harvesting the spider silk protein from the goat milk to try to make new types of super-strong fibers.  Essaidi combined the spider silk with human skin cells from Leiden University Medical Center in the Netherlands.  Such skin is still a long way from adding practical protection to humans, but it gives a glimpse of what future soldiers or would-be superheroes might expect.

    You know, as cool as this is, they could have saved a lot of time just by getting bitten by a radioactive spider.

    Finally, if you’ve got 15 grand laying around, you can get yourself a pair of contact lenses encrusted with diamonds.

    Creator Dr. Chandrashekhar Chawan told Today he got the idea for diamond contact lenses after his wife had the precious stones implanted in her teeth. His new La Ser eye jewelry line features contacts with 18 diamonds adorning a yellow or white gold ring around the lenses. He uses Boston Scleral lenses, which are typically used to treat eye illnesses, to prevent the lenses from touching the cornea. Only 3,996 sets will be made, and Chawan hopes to sell them outside of India. Experts, however, are skeptical about their safety.

    Sal Riggio, a licensed optician at Manhattan Grand Optical in New York City had never heard of the diamond contacts until we brought them to his attention, but he dismissed them when he learned they were not FDA approved. “I don’t know if they’re comfortable and I don’t know if they’re healthy,” Riggio told us. “When they’re FDA approved and distributed in this country then we’ll learn about them, but it sounds ridiculous and unreasonable to me. Do I see a purpose? No, but today’s generation under 30, they do a lot of crazy things to their bodies. Tattoos, piercings—they probably would try it.” He laughed when we told him about the $15,000 price tag. “You’re going to have to call someone in Beverly Hills, because I don’t know anyone here willing to pay that. You won’t ever see them in my store.”

    Today reached out to Dr. Rajesh Khanna, a cornea and refractive surgeon, who also had major misgivings about the glittery contacts, especially using the Boston Scleral lenses on patients who don’t need to wear them. “It’s a cumbersome, bulky lens, which has to be filled with saline solution and then inserted in the eye,” he told them. “The risk-benefit ratio is vastly different than for a person with healthy eyesight.”

    Sure this may not be a permanent modification, but spending that kind of money to change the appearance of your eyes, is definitely a commitment, especially with the risks present.

    Well, that’s it for this week.  I told you it was going to be a short news post.  If you’ve got a story you think should be included in next week’s news post, send me an e-mail or simply click this link.

    Have a great weekend everyone, and I’ll see you back here Monday.


  • The Friday Follow-up

    You know, I completely forgot today was Friday.  This week has been a blur and for some reason today felt like Thursday.  Of course with it being Friday, that means it’s time for this week’s scarification follow-up.  We’ve seen a couple of scars by Richard Effin Ivey this week, and today’s follow-up is another example of his talents.  This scar in particular was important to Richard as it is on his friend, author Malcolm Randall.  Malcolm’s book, The Malchemist, is about accepting yourself, and living through the troubles life can throw at you.  With self-acceptance being a big part of body modification, it’s no wonder that Malcolm’s book is important to Richard.  But enough about the book, let’s take a look at the scar.

    To see how this big rib piece healed up, you know what to do.

    Here’s how it looked 2 months after the cutting..

    And here is Richard and Malcolm 4 months after the cutting, on the day Malcolm’s book was released.

    You can see more of Richard’s scars in his BME portfolio gallery.


  • The Master Returns

    It’s been a while since we’ve seen something by Ron Garza on ModBlog, which is a shame, because he truly is one of the masters of body modification.  Ron spends a lot of time on the road, and this scar was done while he was on one of his many trips.  Hopefully we’ll get to see a healed version of this, as I would love to see how the negative space holds up against the scar tissue.

    Ron has also created a dvd entitled Professional Piercing Basics.  Sean reviewed it a few months back, and said that “(he) would even go as far as to say this is the best piercing video since  the Pierce With a Pro videos by Jim Ward.  There are a few copies left in stock at the BME shop, so make sure to pick one up today.


  • Just shrug it off

    He calls it a 2pt deltoid suspension, I call it the “not a care in the world”.  Look at Supa there, you think he cares what anyone thinks?  He’s doing this for himself, and anything else he just shrugs off.

    Image courtesy of The Kaptive8 Suspension Krew.


  • Post-Script

    I really love how Joey Pang uses the body when she’s creating lettering tattoos.  It fits him so well, and while I can’t translate the Chinese lettering myself, I’m sure the message is meaningful to him.  If you look closely you can see where Joey signed the piece with the Tattoo Temple logo.


  • Need a hug?

    This cute little peacock doesn’t have anyone to hug, so she’s giving herself one.  And yes, I know that it’s male peacocks that have the big feathered tails, but according to Jason Stephan, the client wanted something cute and bubbly to match her personality, so this little critter became a girl.

    Jason works at Loose Screw Tattoo in Richmond, VA.


  • The Blood of Non-Violence

    Those of you familiar with Jainism will recognize this symbol right away.  For those that don’t, the palm with the wheel signifies Ahimsa, one of the main principles of Jainism.  It essentially is a symbol meaning to do no harm to any other living creature.  Seeing it in this form is interesting, as the creation of this involved not only cutting but branding as well, both of which are pretty harmful.  So who better than a minister then to create this piece.  Richard Effin Ivey is a minister with the Church of Body Modification, and part of his personal beliefs is using modification for spiritual growth and harmony.  Richard serves as a conduit, bringing his faith and skill into his work so that the owner of this scar will take away something that will be with him forever in body, mind, and spirit.

    Richard works at Warlock’s Tattoo in Raleigh, NC.


  • Back to 1984

    When Jason Stephan’s wife asked him to tattoo her back, it was the first time he’d ever been able to complete a piece of this size on blank skin.  The couple came up with the design together, and the result is fantastic.  Here’s what Jason’s wife had to say about the design:

    This piece is the culmination of feelings about many of the issues of today. Some of these issues have come up in the past, most notably in George Orwell’s book “1984″ and so this tattoo could be described as a creative visualization of that novel. The lamb/ human figures are representative of all things that are good and innocent about mankind: curiosity, naivete, kindness, tolerance, etc. The robot is symbolic of all of the forces that corrupt those “good things.” The corrupting forces could be technology, government, greed, etc. On the robot’s screen is a face reminiscent on “Big Brother” in Orwell

    Jason works at Loose Screw Tattoo in Richmond, VA.


  • Fall into colour

    I’m pretty sure that’s an ad campaign slogan, but I’ll be damned if it doesn’t sum up this tattoo by Roger from Star City Tattoo.  I don’t know how he does it, but his eye for color is remarkable.  I swear he’s managed to make this tattoo gold in places.


  • How High?

    It’s time again to check in with our friends in the Moscow based Sinner Team.  The last time we saw the gang, they had 5 of their members lined up with hooks ready to suspend.  Not just any suspension mind you, the suspension that the Sinner Team has put on the map, the free fall suspension.  So far most of the photos we’ve seen of their free falls have been from the ground, so it’s been hard to get a good idea of just how high up they’re jumping from.  Well, here’s a couple of photos that might put a knot in your gut.

    And as a little bonus, here’s the latest trailer for their Free Fall Suspension film.