Do I really need to tell the story of the bottom star?
Q: “Why do you always have to take two straight edge kids fishing?”
A: “Because if you only take one, he’ll drink all your beer.”
O dios mio! I’m just kidding!
Tattoo, Piercing, and Body Modification News, Events, and Culture
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Do I really need to tell the story of the bottom star?
Q: “Why do you always have to take two straight edge kids fishing?”
A: “Because if you only take one, he’ll drink all your beer.”
O dios mio! I’m just kidding!
Written by
Please note that links may expire. IAM members, please help out by submitting stories!
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“Today every invention is received with a cry of triumph which soon turns into a cry of fear.”– Bertolt Brecht
It’s not often these days that I get to document a new type of body modification procedure — most procedures are long since invented — so I was thrilled when Ben from House of Color in Colorado Springs sent me the following two photos titled, “eye boogie”.
The procedure, which he calls dermal anchoring, is something he came up with a few years ago and he feels he’s perfected over the last year. It’s starting to take off in Colorado Springs — Ben says he can’t make the custom jewelry fast enough to keep up with demand — and if it works as well as he says it does, perhaps that trend will spread even farther.
Among other things, you may remember Ben as the third person to hold the Guiness World Record for the most number of piercings on a single person in a single session (back in 2001 it was 227 piercings). Running from that notoriety he’s settled down at House of Color (“the first shop I really call home”).
BME: | I assume you first considered the options of surface piercings and transdermal implants which cover similar territory? |
Cam was starting to become a pest about it, and eventually I was ready to try. The feeling of doing the procedure was overwhelming and made me sick to my stomach — I was so scared that if she moved, I’d hit her eye, and let’s face it — insurance won’t cover this.
BME: | How do you put the jewelry in? You said it’s simpler than a transdermal… |
BME: | That’s really clever — how is the aftercare and healing? |
BME: | How do people react to dermal anchors when they see them? |
Co-workers have pushed me to release it to the world, but I’m taking things slow. It’s still really new and I don’t promote it too much. If people ask, I tell them about it — normally the pictures in my portfolio get the conversation started. My philosophy as a piercer is that if you’re doing this for the money, you’re going about it wrong. This is an art form, and that is how it must be treated. That’s when your best work will come out.
BME: | Have you observed any risks that are unique to this procedure? |
Ben can be reached at House of Color in Colorado Springs at 719-390-4128, or you can drop him an email at [email protected]. By the time you read this, he may already have his first batch of jewelry from his manufacturer (all of the earlier pieces were custom made by him). If there’s an interest they’ll add the jewelry to their catalog, so you can talk to him about that as well.
Thank you to Ben for talking to us about this procedure, congratulations to him on being part of a that small roster of artists to contribute a new procedure, and I look forward to seeing more dermal anchoring in the future.
Shannon Larratt
BME.com
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…butt I’ve been doing more staring than writing.
Tony Styles / Evil Ways Tattoo
Seriously though, I do have lots of stuff to post… I’ve just been focussing on getting Phil (BME’s new employee) trained… the last image updates are mostly from him. Sorry for the pause.
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Please note that links may expire. IAM members, please help out by submitting stories!
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Please note that links may expire. IAM members, please help out by submitting stories!
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Please note that links may expire. IAM members, please help out by submitting stories!
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As a general rule of thumb I tend to distrust the quality and safety of door-to-door piercers that service the “piercing party” market — which range from the friend that pierces other friends to the stranger that makes their income from this. That said, I’m sure there must be some solid ones… However, this isn’t one of them. If a piercer works shirtless, start to wonder, but when he works without gloves, leave.
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Speaking of commentary that will alienate the people who contributed the photos (I apologize for that), I find getting tattoos like the one on the right a little disturbing, even more so when they’re not just old tattoos, but current work by artists with a regular clientéle… For starters, it always surprises me when I see the general public get tattoos like this — there is so much good tattoo media out there these days that there’s no excuse for them not to be able to find a solid artist. In all seriousness, what is wrong with their vision that they can’t indentify aesthetic quality? I mean, everyone can identify a beautiful girl… why can’t they do the same for a tattoo?
But what surprises me more is the artists. If they’ve ever picked up a tattoo magazine, ever been to a convention or visited the other studios in their area, surely they know their work is atrocious? Surely they know they’re scarring people for life… Is there not a moral obligation on some level to find a different job? Or do both they and the client simply not care what it looks like? Is simply getting a tattoo the goal, rather than going to the effort to make sure it’s a specific dream piece?
Anyway, lest we get too hung up on bad tattoos, here’s one from Hawaii that I really like: