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Thanks to Richard Windsor for a) clarifying this matter and b) sending visitors this way to check out his pin-ups over here on Tattoosday!
I just want to clarify a little bit what I told you. While I did indeed sketch the first tattoo, all credit should really go to Kelly as his interpretation of my "very rough" drawing by far exceeded my expectations. He took my ideas and the finished product is actually his work, I shouldn't really take credit for what he created. All I did was provide the ideas and the original sketch, which in fairness was 100 times inferior to his creation.
Even something as simple as a bar code can go wrong.
ps. Thank you all for your emails, and pictures, I'm sorry that I don't have time to reply. Most of the pictures you send me are pretty ugly but some of them lack the "horrible" factor so they land on the waiting list. Thanks for your support, and enjoy the tats !
Paul appeared here first, showing off his first tattoo, a dragon. In this post, Paul returns, showing off a full sleeve on his left arm.
The sleeve consists of traditional elements: there is a dragon, a lotus, a mask, a lily, and a koi.
If you went back in a time machine 8 or 9 years to visit Paul's arm, you would have seen a grim reaper holding a skull on the bicep:
and some roses in a pattern on the forearm. These earlier tattoos have been covered by elements in the sleeve. Even when told where the original ink lies, it's extremely difficult to see the previous work.
The upper arm began with the dragon cover-up:
The dark rock below the dragon covered the old piece. This design, which included the aum or om symbol at the top of the arm, was inked by Carlos at Rising Dragon Tattoos in Chelsea back in 2001. The aum symbol is the Siddhaṃ script version and is a mystical and sacred symbol in Indian religions. Note that this om is different than the one that appeare din the first Tattoosday post here.
Paul was not 100% thrilled with the dragon, so when he decided to finish the sleeve, the following year, he went elsewhere.
The lower part of the arm, which is the more prominent part of the sleeve, was inked by Mike Bellamy at Red Rocket Tattoo in Manhattan, although at the time his shop was known as Triple X Tattoo.
The largest piece is the koi. It appears to be a golden koi.
There's a whole discussion here on what koi tattoos symbolize.
In addition, one can read here about the symbolic nature of the lotus flower in tattoos.
Paul also referred to the other flower as a spider lily.
However, there are so many different varieties of specific families of flowers, that I often have a hard time finding good pictures to represent the tattoos.
The additional element in the sleeve which is only a small part, but is still interesting is what Paul referred to as the "kite mask":
Masks are traditional parts of Japanese tattoo design, but this specific one is hard to pinpoint for me. Here are some Chinese mask kites. Yet, the fact that I cannot easily find one on the web, just fascinates me more.
Paul estimates that the whole sleeve (including the dragon from 2001) took about 20 hours of work, and he did it in 6-7 sittings, mostly in 2002.
Paul sent me the following photos from the New York City Tattoo Convention, where Mike Bellamy did some of the work on Paul's sleeve:Regina must be proud, her badly written name on a pice of dough looks pretty sparkly on this guy's arm
ps. It's 501 post in this collection, I suck at noticing things like anniversaries and round number posts (And I didn't notice the 500 post yesterday), but hey, 500 is quite a lot
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