A tattooed person suspends from hooks, laying flat, one leg higher than the other. Their head is back, and they seem to be smiling, dark hair dangling like an anime character.

Tag: Body Modification

  • Take one for the team.

    If there’s one practice associated with the body modification community that enrages and disgusts the general publicand truthfully, many within the community itself it’s voluntary amputation.

    To be wary of it is one thing: Amputation certainly carries with it not only a sense of permanence far surpassing many other modifications, but also generally causes a major upheaval in the way one will live his or her life from that point on, with most people on the sidelines assuming the life of the amputee will be far more difficult and unhappyno matter how many stories there are to the contrary [MORE, MORE, MORE].

    While many find it comfortable to write off those with these desires as lunatics who just havent found the right cocktail of medication to correct whatever mental illness is plaguing them, the psychological conditions that may cause such desiressuch as Body Integrity Identity Disorder and Apotemnophiliaare absolutely real and based solidly in fact. These conditions even made it to prime time last year when a story of voluntary amputation became the premise of a very special episode of CSI: New York.

    As with most things though, peoples opinions tend to shift dramatically when the reasoning behind the act becomes something that is more favorable to the public at large.

    Be it for love:

    For God:

    Or in this case, for the love of the game:

    Brent Blackwell, an Australian rugby player who had broken his finger three years ago and has felt considerable pain ever since, was given two options: Fuse the bones together and give up his sporting livelihood to allow for proper healing, or lop the bastard off and continue playing.

    Normally the sort of situation where a coach may ask a player to just sit this one out, Blackwell went the amputation route, losing the ring finger on his left hand, and resumed his professional career no worse for wear.

    Admitting that it was a bit drastic, he added: I love my footy and love playing sport and if that’s going to help me to succeed at this level then it’s something you’ve just got to do.

    This scenario is not unheard of though: In the final game of the 1985 season for the NFLs San Francisco 49ers, safety Ronnie Lott got his pinky finger stuck in the facemask of an opposing player. Forced to sit out the rest of the game, he was given the similar options of reconstructive surgery and a term on the disabled list or amputation of the top segment of his finger, chose the latter option, and was back with his team in time for the playoffs.

    For these two athletes, amputation was nothing short of a heroic move. I guess its not gross if its good game.

    (Blackwell and Lott links via BoingBoing.)

  • You’ll regret it!

    Tattoo advice from Nik Kelley over at Precision Body Arts in Nashua, NH.

  • Radical ear work

    Last month we mentioned the new ear sculpting and reconstruction work being done by Sampaa in the UK, but I thought that I should also showcase some of the radical work being done by another mad scientist of the underground mod world, IAM:Howie of Luna Cobra. Here’s one of his extreme ear pieces that he did on his recent (and continuing) world tour:

  • Amina Munster on INKED

    I was going to write a nice long entry about how SuicideGirl and IAM member Amina Munster is going to be on tonight’s episode of Inked on A&E but Marisa over at Needled beat me to it. Click the photo below (by Steve Prue of TeamRonin) for more information:

  • Dear Readers,

    If you are going to submit your tattoo photo to BME in trade for membership, please make the photo as suggestive and subtly pornographic as possible. It is appreciated.

  • Ramblings: Pearl Jam to Sailor Jerry.

    Pretty much anybody who knows me [edit: posted by Jordan Ginsberg] is well aware of what an enormous nerd I am when it comes to the band Pearl Jam. My longtime sentimental favorite band, I’ve been following their career since I was in short pants. As one of the Pantheon Level All-Time Great live bands, there are few things I enjoy more than the opportunity to see them in concert.It’s a sad day when you realize that your favorite band hates you.

    Not long after I got to Mexico, the band announced they were to play a full-scale tour in my home country of Canada, a trek that would have enabled me to catch about seven or eight shows had I not just moved a couple thousand kilometers away.

    But I got over it, and within a month, softly crying myself to sleep was a bi-weekly event at best. The tour began a few short weeks ago, and as per usual, the band is releasing high-quality audio files of each show, but is also including several great photos from said concert. The following are of lead guitarist Mike McCready, showing off some of his fairly recent tattoo work:

    I’ll be honest: I was going to make this whole entry about McCready and his tattoo work, but really, there isn’t much to tell. His interest in tattoos was ostensibly piqued after befriending the heavily tattooed frontman of seminal punk band Social Distortion, Mike Ness, and has since covered himself in an array of traditional/flash designs.

    Nothing too exciting.

    With some searching though, it came up that his tattoos were done, at least in part, by a woman named Kate Hellenbrand, who sounded familiar to me for some reason.


    Kate Hellenbrand with Pearl Jam’s Mike McCready after their second session.

    (Now, I’ll come clean that my knowledge of tattoo history is meager at best. If you want to discuss piercing minutiae over a strong coffee or a stiff drink, I’m your man. But tattoo history? I’m the guy who fell asleep during a Lyle Tuttle [MORE] seminar on tattoo machines last week, and I assume that his goons are after me as I write this. Imagine nodding off while listening to Les Paul talk about guitars. Im a putz.)

    It only took a few seconds of browsing her site to peg her as an old friend of none other than Sailor Jerry. Having worked professionally as a tattoo artist since 1972 and having owned a host of shops since then, she is one of the communitys oldest and most well known stars that a tattoo-idiot like me would clearly know nothing about.

    Though her Shanghai Kates page is worth taking a look at as a whole, one section that really struck me was her recalling her relationship with the aforementioned Sailor Jerry Norman Keith Collins:

    [] He was an avid proponent of the art of tattoo, as a staunch conservative, often rankled his community-at-large with his stern demands for respect. He caused a furor when he doubled his fee from $25 to $50 an hour and celebrated when his angered clients swallowed their pride and returned for more work at his new rates.[]He pursued his many hobbies to the professional level. He was a talk-show host, a master seaman, a dance band saxophonist. He was an innovator, a jokester a genius. He was not always easy to love but always worth your respect.In 1972, I was invited to be one of the seven artists at what was to be the first international tattoo convention in Hawaii, hosted by Sailor Jerry Collins. He dubbed us "The Council of the Seven."

    The council lasted approximately a week. When the other attendees left, I remained behind with Jerry to work for another several weeks. Although I had only begun my tattoo career, Jerry opened his home and shop to me, requiring that I work from 3 p.m. to closing (usually around 10:00 p.m.), just as he’d demanded of a regular (i.e. male) apprentice.

    []

    Jerry was a consummate practical joker of incomparable magnitude. Often the entire city of Honolulu would have to halt “business as usual” because of one of his pranks. One favorite was the time he strapped a giant salami and two hairy coconuts just below the golden belt on the revered statue of King Kamehameha, right before the beginning of the King Kamehameha Day parade. Floats, marching bands, majorettes, and dignitaries had to stand in the hot Hawaiian sun until workers could find a ladder large enough to scramble up and cut down the offending pornographic appendages. He was never found out for his many elaborate escapades.

    []

    I was the least likely candidate for this kind of relationship with him. I respected the two things he disliked the most in tattooers: youthful inexperience and being female. However, his real nature overrode his prejudices. His gifts to me were of generosity, patience, friendship, and understanding. He was a teacher, a role model, a rascal, an innovator, and a legend.

     


    “Sailor Jerry” Norman Keith Collins.

    This may all be old hat to many, but I assume that Im not alone in my relative ignorance of these early proprietors and pioneers. I can only imagine that there are hundreds more stories to hear.

    Maybe its just me, but its always nice to know that youve still got a lot to learn.

  • Sweetest Tattoo Story Ever?

    Every Friday the 13th Elm Street Tattoos in Dallas has a giant party, and June 13th, 2005 was no exception. Tony, one of the artists (you’ve likely seen his work on BME) was doing Friday the 13th tattoos on everyone, with his girlfriend of six years last in line — she’d been promised a “special” tattoo. It gets to be her turn, and as he’s starting to finish up, people are gathering around, pulling out cameras, and she’s getting a little freaked out… But Tasha figures that it’s probably just a really nice tattoo.

    He finishes up, and she looks in the mirror — “holy shit!”

    After much cheering and clapping, Tony hands Tasha the tattoo machine and asks her to tattoo the answer on him in return.

    In about an hour from now they get married. Big congratulations to them, and wow — Tony sure is lucky the answer wasn’t no, she’d have murdered him!

  • Assorted Trivia

    Looks like the power outage in Los Angeles may have temporarily knocked Needled offline, so I guess the pressure is on me to make sure you have something to look at. How about this puzzle-piece picture of a skin removal that the “owner” had framed… two pieces of art for the price of one!

    That piece is on/off BigDaddyIsaac in Oregon.

    Then there’s VeganJarret… he really, and I mean really likes Star Wars. It’s certainly not unusual for me to see Star Wars themed tattoos, but it is very unusual to actually see the movie titles tattooed (done by Kris Roberts at Electra Art Tattoos in Corpus Cristi, Texas).

    Speaking of tattoos that are unusual in theme or nature, while I do see “I love (whoever)” type stuff all the time, it’s not so common to see the opposite, so I was kind of surprised to see this “I DON’T LIKE JENN” tattoo… Perhaps it’s a clever pop culture reference, but if it is, it’s going over my head.

    That said, it’s no I’M GONNA KILL YOU, RAY ROMANO. That one wins hands down.

  • Not an official recommendation!

    Guerilla suspension demands guerilla aftercare?


    “Duct tape fixes everything”

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