BOOK AN APPOINTMENT: www.edenbodyartstudios.com/booking ALL SEMINARS: www.edenbodyartstudios.com/edu DEANNA'S SEMINARS: deannaart.com/education EDEN INSTAGRAM: instagram.com/edenbodyartstudios/?hl=en DEANNA'S INSTAGRAM: instagram.com/deanna_art/?hl=en MARK'S INSTAGRAM: instagram.com/markwadeink/
I still have to question the longevity of this style above. From I’ve been told and what I know, it won’t last the test of time. How do you think this looks in 15 years? It’s beautiful right now though. Masterful even, but…. will it last. I feel you use more contrast and black + grey wash which will give the tattoo more structure over the years. Not trying to be a dick, just curious
We actually talked about this a lot in our podcast episode we did with Mark! All tattoos fade and change over time, no matter the style. Some principals though, like contrast and use of black, are universal, and can absolutely be applied to realism tattoos.
I get Deanna James is saying about taking complements, and not thinking its good enough, "In essence she is saying (If i say it's good enough i get lazy and stop progressing.)"
I both will feel good bout a tattoo i just did right after the look at the pictures all night and then hate it, but also will hate a tattoo i did right after then look at it three weeks later and be like oh actually that does look good. I think both way is just having looked at your own art too long. You have to step away and let your mind and soul breathe then come back to it with new eyes to see what you could improve on if you still feel like its lacking to make it to your own standard, or actually give yourself a pat on the back you should. Artist thrive on their own self inflicted pain in order to get better. 😂🖤 Also you guys are doing awesome things. just a little productive criticism, it would be easier to understand if we could see both y’all’s pallets, even if they are different ink companies. That way we could actually understand the color theory he was trying to explain hands on.
BOOK AN APPOINTMENT: www.edenbodyartstudios.com/booking
ALL SEMINARS: www.edenbodyartstudios.com/edu
DEANNA'S SEMINARS: deannaart.com/education
EDEN INSTAGRAM: instagram.com/edenbodyartstudios/?hl=en
DEANNA'S INSTAGRAM: instagram.com/deanna_art/?hl=en
MARK'S INSTAGRAM: instagram.com/markwadeink/
What machines and needle configurations are you each using?
I still have to question the longevity of this style above. From I’ve been told and what I know, it won’t last the test of time. How do you think this looks in 15 years? It’s beautiful right now though. Masterful even, but…. will it last. I feel you use more contrast and black + grey wash which will give the tattoo more structure over the years. Not trying to be a dick, just curious
We actually talked about this a lot in our podcast episode we did with Mark! All tattoos fade and change over time, no matter the style. Some principals though, like contrast and use of black, are universal, and can absolutely be applied to realism tattoos.
🔥🔥🔥🔥
I get Deanna James is saying about taking complements, and not thinking its good enough, "In essence she is saying (If i say it's good enough i get lazy and stop progressing.)"
It’s astounding how many tattoo artists there are these days! It’s no surprise that so many of them are struggling financially.
I both will feel good bout a tattoo i just did right after the look at the pictures all night and then hate it, but also will hate a tattoo i did right after then look at it three weeks later and be like oh actually that does look good. I think both way is just having looked at your own art too long. You have to step away and let your mind and soul breathe then come back to it with new eyes to see what you could improve on if you still feel like its lacking to make it to your own standard, or actually give yourself a pat on the back you should.
Artist thrive on their own self inflicted pain in order to get better. 😂🖤
Also you guys are doing awesome things. just a little productive criticism, it would be easier to understand if we could see both y’all’s pallets, even if they are different ink companies. That way we could actually understand the color theory he was trying to explain hands on.