Tampilkan postingan dengan label tattoos for women tigers. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label tattoos for women tigers. Tampilkan semua postingan

Selasa, 25 Maret 2014

Women Tiger Tattoo Designs?

Q. Tiger is the symbol of power and strength,world The chinies saying tiger os the âKing of the Animalsâ. It is considered that one feels stronger if a tiger looks in oneâs dreams.Tiger tattoos are each stunning and powerful body art choices. http://pakvogue.com/2012/03/03/women-tiger-tattoo-designs/


Answer
You could get a tigers paws on your breast and then the head resting on your shoulder & then have the body go down back. Have the legs wrap around your legs

Were did tattoos originate ?




Kahnisha


Tattooing


Answer
Tattooing has been a practice of almost every known people. The Ainu, the indigenous people of Japan, wore unique facial tattoos. Tattooing was widespread among Polynesian peoples, and in the Philippines, Borneo, Samoa, Africa, Japan, and China.

Tattooing has been a Eurasian practice since Neolithic times. "Ãtzi the Iceman", dated circa 3300 BC was tattooed, as was the mummified male found in the Pasaryk burial whose body was tattooed with stylized animal designs. In the Steppes, other natural mummies up to 7000 years old have been found to have tattoos.

Europeans rediscovered tattooing during the exploration of the South Pacific under Captain James Cook in the 1770s, and sailors were particularly identified with tattoos in European culture until after World War I.

Tattoos have always had an important role in ritual and tradition. In Borneo, women tattooed symbols on their forearm indicating their particular skill. If a woman wore a symbol indicating she was a skilled weaver, her status as prime marriageable material was increased. Tattoos around the wrist and fingers were believed to ward away illness. Throughout history tattoos have signified membership in a clan or society. Even today groups like the Hells Angels tattoo their particular group symbol. TV and movies have used the idea of a tattoo indication membership in a secret society numerous times. It has been believed that the wearer of an image calls the spirit of that image. The ferocity of a tiger would belong to the tattooed person. That tradition holds true today shown by the proliferation of images of tigers, snakes, and bird of prey.

In recorded history, the earliest tattoos can be found in Egypt during the time of the construction of the great pyramids (It undoubtedly started much earlier). When the Egyptians expanded their empire, the art of tattooing spread as well. The civilizations of Crete, Greece, Persia, and Arabia picked up and expanded the art form. Around 2000 BC tattooing spread to China.

The Greeks used tattooing for communication among spies. Markings identified the spies and showed their rank. Romans marked criminals and slaves. This practice is still carried on today. The Ainu people of western Asia used tattooing to show social status. Girls coming of age were marked to announce their place in society, as were the married women. The Ainu are noted for introducing tattoos to Japan where it developed into a religious and ceremonial rite. In Borneo, women were the tattooists. It was a cultural tradition. They produced designs indicating the owners station in life and the tribe he belonged to. Kayan women had delicate arm tattoos which looked like lacy gloves. Dayak warriors who had "taken a head" had tattoos on their hands. The tattoos garnered respect and assured the owners status for life. Polynesians developed tattoos to mark tribal communities, families, and rank. They brought their art to New Zealand and developed a facial style of tattooing called Moko which is still being used today. There is evidence that the Mayan, Incas, and Aztecs used tattooing in the rituals. Even the isolated tribes in Alaska practiced tattooing, their style indicating it was learned from the Ainu.

In the west, early Britons used tattoos in ceremonies. The Danes, Norse, and Saxons tattooed family crests (a tradition still practiced today). In 787 AD, Pope Hadrian banned tattooing. It still thrived in Britain until the Norman Invasion of 1066. The Normans disdained tattooing. It disappeared from Western culture from the 12th to the 16th centuries.

While tattooing diminished in the west, it thrived in Japan. At first, tattoos were used to mark criminals. First offenses were marked with a line across the forehead. A second crime was marked by adding an arch. A third offense was marked by another line. Together these marks formed the Japanese character for "dog". It appears this was the original "Three strikes, you're out" law. In time, the Japanese escalated the tattoo to an aesthetic art form. The Japanese body suit originated around 1700 as a reaction to strict laws concerning conspicuous consumption. Only royalty were allowed to wear ornate clothing. As a result of this, the middle class adorned themselves with elaborate full body tattoos. A highly tattooed person wearing only a loin cloth was considered well dressed, but only in the privacy of their own home.

William Dampier is responsible for re-introducing tattooing to the west. He was a sailor and explorer who traveled the South Seas. In 1691 he brought to London a heavily tattooed Polynesian named Prince Giolo, Known as the Painted Prince.




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Kamis, 10 Oktober 2013

White women, does it creep you out when men ask questions like, "How can I get an attractive, white woman"?

tattoos for women tigers on Tiger Tattoo Designs
tattoos for women tigers image



sidewayz


When men ask how to attract women solely based on their skin tone?

Did you learn anything from the Tiger Woods event?

Is anyone else having problems seeing the current YA! questions?



Answer
My area is mostly white, and I am white. My mother would prefer I stay with a woman I share the same heritage with. I did date a couple women who were not really that white, and it didn't bother me. The first was Hawaiian, and she was a mixture of Hawaiian and Mexican. Her problem was she liked every other guy she met as well. The second woman I dated who was not real white looking looked more southern European. She was very protective of her racial make up. I at one time told her she didn't have to feel ashamed of her ancestors. I think she must have had either a considerable amount of Native American ancestry, or something else. She had an olive complexion, brown eyes, brown hair, she was short and very sweet. She reminded me almost of a Gypsy. We went to a tattoo parlor to look around once. The lady working their showed me Irish tattoos, and pointed out Native American tattoos for her. That was the only real difference I found among people. My family is fairly racist, but I introduced her to all of them. No one raised a white flag and none told me she was to dark to date. I think she could pass as an Italian. Her mother I met was white, as were her siblings, but they had a different father. The picture she showed me of her deceased father must have been wrong, he looked really white. Her mother did go to bars when she was younger, she may have gotten with a guy of mixed ancestry. I really have to say that she was the sweetest girl I ever met. I blew the relationship, and it bothered me for a long time.

As for asking about how to get an attractive white woman, there are plenty around here. Since I have blue eyes and pale skin I think I fit in with dating them more than others might. But my behavior in the past has not set me up to be a successful husband. I have really nothing to offer a woman but love.

Can someone please answer a couple questions about tattoo please?




Nikki 305


So before people say anything, I'm not getting the tattoo until I am 18, which is in two months. I been wanting a tattoo for a few years now, even though my parents would kill me if they found out. Anyways I'm first going to show you the tattoo I want so that you can answer my questions.
http://www.tattoobite.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/women-butterfly-tiger-tattoos-designs.jpg
Okay so the first question would be how much money should that cost?
The next one is can the tattoo artist make it just like that, because I have seen other images and I don't like them like I like that one because it looks realistic.
Also, I want to put it on my lower back center. Is that a good spot, and how is that area for tattooing when it comes to pain?
(I don't want the flowers around the butterfly, I just want the Tiger Butterfly).
Thanks for answering my questions. (:
Actually I do want the flowers there I'm just not sure about it because if you look at the picture, the girl's tattoo is slanted and i want mine going straight across my lower back (horizontally). So if you think it would look good going straight across from the wings (one side of the wings to the other) let me know cause I would do that, instead of it going slanted vertically.



Answer
Without color & light shading at the shop I go to that would be around $150-200, price usually depends on the shop & quality of the artist's work. I can't give a price for color because I have black ink.

The lower back is a large area & shading hurts like a mother. Areas with little fat, or are bone-y like your feet, knees, wrist, etc. usually hurt more than other places. Some people say the opposite, I guess it depends on you.

Like you, I thought over the idea of getting a tattoo for years, to me the pain was worth it.

A talented tattoo artist can make that easily, they can alter it too if you want to make it unique.




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