Flower Tattoos Are a Big Hit Among Most Women

Posted on May 03 2009 at 08:05 AM


The art of tattooing, it seems, is more popular than ever. With many American women now sporting flower tattoos and other designs boasting other exquisite, feminine patterns. Indeed, it's almost a right of passage now for young women to get something that expresses their personalities, outlooks and interests. With so many quality studios all across the country, females in every region can find unique and beautiful ink representations to accentuate their own natural beauty of face and form.

Currently, one of the most popular types for young women is the lower back tattoo, which usually consists of some kind of floral design such as twining rose vines or midnight heart vines or some other variety of gorgeous flowers such as violets, daisies, orchids, tulips, or anything else that the artist's imagination can envision and then etch into living flesh with his whirring needles and brightly colored inks. It truly is an art what they do.

In past generations, tattooing was looked down upon as a lower class artistic endeavor. But today, the high level of artistry coupled with advances in its technology, new drawings and new, more vibrantly colored inks, have lifted it into the mainstream. In the 21st Century, parlors spread out from the back alleys and outskirts of military bases, where they rested by pawn shops, biker bars, motorcycle parts stores and check-cashing outlets to suburban strip malls, where they are nestled between hair salons and high-end retail clothing outlets.

Of course, the popularity of shows like L.A. Ink and Miami Ink, featuring celebrity artists like Kat Von D hasn't hurt the art at all. In fact, it has made it seem more glamorous than ever. It's hard to find a gorgeous female Hollywood celebrity or high fashion model now that doesn't sport some ink. Look at Angelina Jolie or Pamela Anderson, both of whom wear them proudly as they stride down the red carpet in their expensive designer gowns. Even the more conservative female celebrities probably have a tiny, discrete one of a butterfly or a flower somewhere on their tanned, toned, well-groomed forms. Placing them on the ankle is so common now among members of the fairer sex that they're almost a clichĂŠ.

The pervasive popularity of feminine ink art just shows how much tastes in popular culture have shifted, with some artists now getting their work featured in books intended not just to share with other tattooists, but also with the general, tattoo-loving public, and even art lovers. In fact, many of the best contemporary tattoo artists have had their work featured in art galleries or museum showcases such as the permanent collection of the Smithsonian Art Museum in Washington D.C. or the South Street Seaport Museum in New York City. Granted, there are still the sleazy self-styled "outlaw" parlors that cater mostly to bikers, servicemen and drunken, slumming college kids, who pick their flaming death's heads and babe designs from the array on the parlor walls.

It has also, ironically, branched off into upscale art studios located in nice areas that have the atmosphere of a high-class hair salon and advertising that targets the desires and pocketbooks of middle-class and upper-middle class professionals. It's amazing to think of just how far the art of tattooing has penetrated polite society. So the next time you're in a shopping mall or department store in an affluent area, you can guess, with a reasonable degree of certainty that all of the women below the age of 50 probably have flower tattoos of some kind somewhere on their stylish bodies. That's to be expected in trendy, 21st Century America.

Bullseye Tattoos offers the best selection online of printable, ready to use designs for Flower tattoos, lower back tattoos, and much more! Visut us online at BullseyeTattoos.com to find just what you're looking for!
Source: http://www.isnare.com/?aid=341229&ca=Womens+Interest

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Floral Tattoos: Flower Power For The 21st Century

Posted on May 03 2009 at 08:03 AM

Those old enough to remember the days of Woodstock, Haight-Ashbury, and the Volkswagen microbus as the transportation of choice will also remember Peace Signs and Flower Power.

There was even a 1967 hit song by Scott McKenzie with the lyrics," If you're going to San Francisco, be sure to wear some flowers in your hair."

What goes around comes around, or so many a clichĂŠ lover has said, and the Flower Power of the 1960s has resurfaced again, not in hairpieces, but in tattoos.

Flower tattoos have an undeniable appeal to those of gentle spirit, both male and female. But politics aside, flower tattoos are simply lovely to look at and that alone makes them a favorite for women.

Women who began flocking to the boardrooms and offices of the American business culture in the 1980s also began flocking to the tattoo parlors of America, although at first their choices were both small and discreetly positioned.

All that has changed in the past twenty-five years, and the 21st century woman is willing to match any man in her choice of tattoos. Yet flower tattoos still remain the one which women most often request.

Many women choose single small flower tattoos as their introduction to the art of tattooing, and add more to it to form a garland or use it as the basis for a larger and more complex tattoo at a later date.

And flower tattoos allow the freedom to choose any colors in the tattoo artist's ink palette, whether or not they are actually found in nature. Blue roses, for instance, are extremely popular floral tattoos, and represent a striving for the impossible, because there are no naturally blue roses.

Roses, blue or otherwise, are without a doubt the most requested of all floral tattoos. The have come to symbolize everything from passionate love to eternal beauty to, when their thorns are portrayed, danger and hardship.

Hawaiian floral tattoos, on the other hand, are generally considered unisex tattoos, and are as popular with men as with women. They can include everything from the big, showy yellow Hawaiian Hibiscus to the delicate Cattleya Orchids, the blooms of which can measure anywhere from the one inch to eight inches across.

Miniature Cattleyas are perfect for floral tattoos on the ankle or shoulder blade, while the larger blooms can decorate backs, arms, shoulders, legs, or any place that one wants covered in beauty.

One of the biggest appeals of floral tattoos is that they will never become outdated; and a skilled tattoo artist can even create fantasy flowers with the colors of one variety, petals of another, and leaves and stems of a third.

A floral tattoo of a single bloom can be centered around the navel; floral tattoos can be vines winding around arms or legs.

Floral tattoos, 21st century style, in fact, can do anything a garden full of natural flowers can do, and much, much more!

Matt Garrett - 2007 www.TopTattooDesign.Com Don't Be The One In Four Who Hate Their New Tattoo! Grab Your Copy Of Our Free Tattoo Guide: - Free Tattoo Guide

Source: http://www.isnare.com/?aid=184184&ca=Arts+and+Crafts

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