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.

Category: ModBlog

  • Devil’s Threeway: The Innards

    Pauly Unstoppable just updated with a great “xray vision” photo showing exactly how his “Devil’s Threeway” nose-tip piercing that I posted about recently was done (making me feel a little sillier than I did before for initially thinking this was a microdermal project, not two mantis piercings and a septril).

    devils-threeway-closeup

  • Once you go blackwork…

    Like the old saying goes, “once you go blackwork, you never go back to work”… err… something like that? Anyway, I want to share two great new pieces from two of the masters of geometric dotwork blackwork tattooing, with the top tattoo being done by Matt Black of Divine Canvas in London — I love the way he used multiple levels — and the bottom one, a beautiful swastika earburst, by Brian Gomes on Andre Cruz.

    blackwork1

    blackwork2

  • Jewelry for Vampire Killers

    I’m totally geeking over this super cool piercing done by Lee McFarland, a piercer at Oak City Tattoo & Piercing in North Carolina. It’s actually a quite standard piercing when it comes right down to it, a three point industrial done with very clever placement and great looking custom jewelry by Body Vision. The whole thing threads together and “fakes” the blades/arms of the cross going through the helix. I have to admit it would be awesome if it was pierced through big full-size slots, but all things considered, this is the responsible way to do this that’s more likely to have success for the client. Superb work. Looks like there’s one piece of bar (the one on the “blade” end) that’s going to have to be shortened and perhaps have the angle slightly altered, but this is a simple matter — better to have erred on the side of too long than have it be too short and wreck the piercing.

    Click to zoom!

  • Wood Body Jewelry Facts [The Modified World]

    J.C. Potts is back with another excellent weekly video magazine, this time talking about wood body — design, safety, and so on. I’d beg Rachel to offer J.C. a job here at BME if it weren’t for the fact that I think one of his strengths as a journalist is that he’s truly independent — he’s not sponsored by any website or company, so he can speak freely and without bias or influence. Always worth watching. I’ll keep on mentioning it here, but if you’re a YouTube member, you need to subscribe.

  • Wheeee!!!

    I’m not sure where to put “zip line suspending” on my “most fun suspensions” list, which currently has “freefall suspension” at the top, followed by “spinning beam”. If you’re wondering “360 degree rotisserie“, which might seem fun, is at the very bottom after hearing just terrible things about it. Photo: Tayri Rodriguez.

    ziplinesuspension

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