...ook de plek van een tattoo is het ene moment hot en het volgende moment not. Een nieuwe trend is de duimtattoo, is het iets voor jou? 20x inspiratie...
tattoo work by tt.wana
Penguin tattoos are a great way to show your love of these flightless birds while also showing off a bit of your personality. Whether you want to get a
Whether you’re a cat lover or a lover of tattoos, cat tattoos are worth investigating. The human-feline relationship goes way back in time
Discover best moth tattoo ideas! Express your style with perfect moth designs. Explore now!
11x14 ink print
By Alan George Picture this, stepping into your hallway that’s not just a passageway, but a vibrant expression of you. Imagine soft, colorful runner...
Explore that simple's 390 photos on Flickr!
Descarga esta Foto Premium de Una maniquí con líquido goteando por su rostro. y descubre más de 49 Millones de fotos de stock en Freepik. #freepik #foto #dorado #bodyart #papeldeoro
"Do you have any idea," Crowley said. "How much trouble I'd get into down there if anybody read this?" Aziraphale pursed his lips. "I don't think anyone in your part of the world reads Robert Green...
Bots be gone.
The ouroboros is a symbol showing a serpent eating its own tail, and representing eternal cycles. It isn’t really a mythical creature, because despite the prevalence of the image and concept in various cultures and philosophies (especially alchemy), it doesn’t appear that anyone thought it represented a real species or individual animal. I, however, have been having fun imagining some of these symbolic creatures as if they were real (see the mushussu), and the chief thing that struck me about the ouroboros is how bored it must be, poor thing. You can see in the traditional representations that it might be able to have fun rolling about like a hoop snake, but for the most part wouldn’t enjoy much variety in its life. So, what if there was an ouroboros with the soul of an artist? An ouroboros with imagination? That’s how I came up with the idea of letting my ouroboros form, instead of a simple circle, a more interesting endless knot, also a symbol in cultures around the world, and also representing eternity. As for the carving of this piece, my original design had the body simply patterned with lines for the scales, as in this first state rough draft. I decided to give it a little more interest by make a stripe of white scales run its length, so I carved some more. Alas, I think that may have been a mistake. I think the knot is clearer and the whole image cleaner-looking without the extra white, so perhaps I should have left well enough alone. But you can’t know ’til you’ve tried! So now, here he (or she) is: the ouroboros with the heart of a poet. [Pictures: Ouroboros, wood block print from Abraham Eleazar's Uraltes Chymisches Werk, 1760; The device of Barthélemy Aneau, wood block print from Picta poesis, 1552 (Image from Glasgow University); First state test print by AEGN, 2014; Ouroboros Makes a Poem, rubber block print by AEGN, 2014 (sold out).] NOTICE: Last Open Studio show before autumn: Dedham Open Studios, Sunday, May 18, 11:00-5:00.
As you might've realized from our publications on the Facebook group 'What in the $20 wish tattoo machine is this?' or the 'That's It, I'm Inkshaming' group, sadly, subpar tattoos are pretty common. Which makes the good ones even more admirable.
From puzzle pieces to pizza slices, there's a cute matching set for everyone (and their other half).