For much of the 20th century in the United States, tattoos were associated with rebellion and criminality — linked to ...
When tattoos first emerged in the 1800s, they were considered a sign of being a criminal or deviant. Today, they are increasingly commonplace. According to one estimate, 38 percent of adults between ...
TATTOOS may protect people from the deadliest form of skin cancer, new research suggests. Melanoma is less common in people ...
Tattoo artists spend hours turning ideas into permanent art, but they also spend a surprising amount of time answering the ...
Getting your first tattoo rarely happens in a perfectly calm, logical moment. More often, it arrives wrapped in adrenaline and emotion, with the sense that something meaningful is about to happen.
Your next tattoo session might leave you with a case of the “tattoo flu.” ...
Anyone over 40 years of age likely remembers an era when a tattoo communicated that you had done time in prison, the navy, or a circus. Much has changed since then. Tattoos now appear on people from ...
Tattoos have been a part of human culture since ancient times. Ancient peoples in many cultures used tattoos to tell stories, to mark a coming-of-age, and to denote triumphs and to which tribe they ...
Tintoretta Tattoo Studio is hosting an open house day for people 55 and older who have put off getting their first tattoo.