What a great idea!!! I worked in a lab and I can vouch that "drops" are not always the same from day to day. The idea of having a kit that gives you the chance to have that kind of consistency is so smart!!
Thank you for your support and feedback! I appreciate you. That is a great question! The numbers 20,40,60,80 is the different tones of the ink. 20 being the lightest and 80 being the darkest. We get 4 different tones to work with in this greywash pack from Dynamic.
Just bought the dynamic Grey wash kit and this video pretty much helped me decide on getting it. Also I notice this video old but I was wondering what are you running your tattoo machine at for shading?much appreciated and thank you
Thats a great theory! I think the tone would theoretically have to be a bit different from fake skin to human skin and even from person to person it will have to again theoretically change because of the skin color itself. From my experience I can anticipate how dark the shading will be prior to using shading because of the 20,40,60,80 pre-made's. This makes it much easier for me to visualize how it'll look healed, but yea I am certain some sort of fluctuations after settling will occur. I think that also may apply to any ink we'd choose to use because of the nature of human skin.
Do the numbers correspond to the actual diluted concentrate compared to the pure black version? Like if I bought Dynamic Black and made a 4:1 mix, would it be the same as the Grey Wash 20, or are the numbers just a name and nothing more?
Now thats a great one! Hmmm now do not get me wrong I have made PLENTY of mistakes more so on fake skin over human skin. Allow me to explain. So when I tattoo fake skin I want to make mistakes so I can do better and know what to stay away from. When I tattoo human skin I have never had the problem of being prone to blowing out people and I feel it is because of the time I have under the needle on fake skin. So I am naturally comfortable tattooing human skin and I am not prone to blowouts as some maybe. However when a mistake does occur and believe me they do indeed occur. I just keep on going. When I notice the mistake happening I will pull the needle out wipe up, and kind of figure it out from there. Shape up a line. double back over it, it really just depends on the design. No tattoo is ever perfect, even the most prestigious artist forget to connect lines and we all have blowouts from time to time in which I also feel it is kind of natural to mess up and blow people out. I feel it becomes wrong when blowouts, scars, keloids, wonky lines that just stand out, etc are happening every single tattoo 1 may do. If these negative no no's are happening every single we would want to go back to the chop block and find another approach. Long story short I just keep on rolling and do the best I can. The skills we develop begin to contribute to problem solving along the way as well, so after a while things start going full circle.
@@TrueFFranco Yea of course! You're welcome bro! I appreciate you taking the time to drop a comment. Thank you. Don't hesitate to reach out to me should you ever have any questions.
That is actually a very good question! So to my understanding and I could be wrong but the 80% is not as black as say the regular dynamic black. From the side verbatim it is listed as "#80- The darkest of the set, a deep and full-bodied wash." So what I get from that is that in context and comparison to the greywash set the 80 is the darkest, from this greywash set. If I am correct I think the standard dynamic black ink and triple black are still far more darker. I will reach out to dynamic directly to see if I can get more accurate information. I apologize about that, if you would bare with me to see what info I can obtain.
Thank you for your feedback and support! I appreciate you. I do recommend this greywash set as it will provide consistency which will in theory help our performance I feel. I will make more videos with this ink and keep you all updated. You are going to like the greywash set! When it arrives, come back and let me know what you think. Don't hesitate to let me know if you have any questions at all. I will do my best to assist you in the best possible direction.
That is a great question! The Dynamic Greywash set I reviewed in this video can be found right here dynamiccolor.com/collections/black-and-white-inks/products/dynamic-greywash-tattoo-ink-4-oz-bottle-set Please, don't hesitate to let me know if you have any questions at all. I will do my best to assist you in the best possible direction.
That’s a great question! Yes I have used them on human skin and it’s fantastic. I actually have some videos on my channel where I use this ink. I will link them below for you so you can check them out. How To Stipple Whip Pepper Shade-Tattooing 101 th-cam.com/video/hHvei0UPhr8/w-d-xo.html Shading A Rose Tattoo On Human Skin th-cam.com/video/eaXZA81VI4g/w-d-xo.html
do you have a video on sterilization? I dont wanna have any mdeical issues with anyone once i do get to that stage. Noobie soon to be Elite! Been watching your videos for a little while during my exploring stage of tattooing. Appreciate you and your content!!
Thats good info to know. I myself have not personally tried out their triple black but maybe in the near future I can get my hands on some to check it out. If I may, what do you use the triple black for on your end?
@@DanielYuck Lining and grey wash. It is so versatile. I recently used some of their lemon yellow and leaf green and both are very vibrant. I am actually switching over to their colors for daily use.
My problem with coil machines is they shake way to much. My pen and rotary machines. They are more quite, easier to set up/break down. And in my experience coils give out faster then rotary machines as well
I think it is all subjective. I started with coils but I was not a fan of the setup or vibrations. Something about coils was a bit too much power for what I personally was looking for but I still spent some time under a coil prior to moving over to short style tattoo pen machines. I have met a lot of people that like pen style machines, rotary, coils, stick and poke, etc. I do also feel it is never wrong or cant hurt to know how to properly assemble a coil setup.
@@JoshuaGreen918 These are some of the key factors that helped me determine what style of machine I wanted to use. I personally prefer short pen style tattoo machines. Low noise, Low vibrations and easy to maintain, sterilize, etc.
Can I use the 80 as lining? Over all great video learnt a lot thanks
What a great idea!!! I worked in a lab and I can vouch that "drops" are not always the same from day to day. The idea of having a kit that gives you the chance to have that kind of consistency is so smart!!
I used this set for my John Wick portrait, worked out great, very consistent.
That is very very cool to know! Thank you for the info.
waiting on my tattoo machine to get here! but i got the same set as this. looks like i won't be disappointed
I need a good greywash. My only concern is that by going over work enough to get good saturation it's going to end up black
The Video will be better with a curved mag
Right
Very informative bro 👍 I’ve just purchased this set so the video is perfectly timed
are the numbers: 20, 40, 60, 80 - a percentage of ink , or just some numbers? Or do you know how to make a 20 or 40 in home? GREAT VIDEOS Cheers
Thank you for your support and feedback! I appreciate you.
That is a great question!
The numbers 20,40,60,80 is the different tones of the ink. 20 being the lightest and 80 being the darkest. We get 4 different tones to work with in this greywash pack from Dynamic.
Just bought the dynamic Grey wash kit and this video pretty much helped me decide on getting it. Also I notice this video old but I was wondering what are you running your tattoo machine at for shading?much appreciated and thank you
I went with dynamic black for my first bottle with 1oz of white, mixing my own at the moment but im definitely going to go the pre mix route 🇨🇦👍
Wonder if it reacts different on real skin since it mixes in with plasma. Will the tone be lighter 🤔
Thats a great theory! I think the tone would theoretically have to be a bit different from fake skin to human skin and even from person to person it will have to again theoretically change because of the skin color itself.
From my experience I can anticipate how dark the shading will be prior to using shading because of the 20,40,60,80 pre-made's. This makes it much easier for me to visualize how it'll look healed, but yea I am certain some sort of fluctuations after settling will occur.
I think that also may apply to any ink we'd choose to use because of the nature of human skin.
Do the numbers correspond to the actual diluted concentrate compared to the pure black version? Like if I bought Dynamic Black and made a 4:1 mix, would it be the same as the Grey Wash 20, or are the numbers just a name and nothing more?
Thanks for the info, what do u think about the mas lancer or the mast flip?
I have a question Daniel. What do you do if you make a mistake while tattooing a person like going to deep and blow up the person skin ?
Now thats a great one!
Hmmm now do not get me wrong I have made PLENTY of mistakes more so on fake skin over human skin. Allow me to explain.
So when I tattoo fake skin I want to make mistakes so I can do better and know what to stay away from. When I tattoo human skin I have never had the problem of being prone to blowing out people and I feel it is because of the time I have under the needle on fake skin.
So I am naturally comfortable tattooing human skin and I am not prone to blowouts as some maybe. However when a mistake does occur and believe me they do indeed occur. I just keep on going. When I notice the mistake happening I will pull the needle out wipe up, and kind of figure it out from there. Shape up a line. double back over it, it really just depends on the design.
No tattoo is ever perfect, even the most prestigious artist forget to connect lines and we all have blowouts from time to time in which I also feel it is kind of natural to mess up and blow people out.
I feel it becomes wrong when blowouts, scars, keloids, wonky lines that just stand out, etc are happening every single tattoo 1 may do. If these negative no no's are happening every single we would want to go back to the chop block and find another approach.
Long story short I just keep on rolling and do the best I can. The skills we develop begin to contribute to problem solving along the way as well, so after a while things start going full circle.
@@DanielYuck thank you so much bro for the detail response.
@@TrueFFranco Yea of course! You're welcome bro! I appreciate you taking the time to drop a comment. Thank you. Don't hesitate to reach out to me should you ever have any questions.
I've had blow outs on human skin. Luckily my own. I simply fixed the best I could with a thicker line or solid colour
So is the 80 regular dynamic black? Then say the supper black is 100?
That is actually a very good question!
So to my understanding and I could be wrong but the 80% is not as black as say the regular dynamic black. From the side verbatim it is listed as "#80- The darkest of the set, a deep and full-bodied wash." So what I get from that is that in context and comparison to the greywash set the 80 is the darkest, from this greywash set.
If I am correct I think the standard dynamic black ink and triple black are still far more darker. I will reach out to dynamic directly to see if I can get more accurate information. I apologize about that, if you would bare with me to see what info I can obtain.
Nice video I'm going to get this set.
Thank you for your feedback and support!
I appreciate you.
I do recommend this greywash set as it will provide consistency which will in theory help our performance I feel. I will make more videos with this ink and keep you all updated. You are going to like the greywash set! When it arrives, come back and let me know what you think.
Don't hesitate to let me know if you have any questions at all. I will do my best to assist you in the best possible direction.
Where you order it from?
That is a great question!
The Dynamic Greywash set I reviewed in this video can be found right here dynamiccolor.com/collections/black-and-white-inks/products/dynamic-greywash-tattoo-ink-4-oz-bottle-set
Please, don't hesitate to let me know if you have any questions at all. I will do my best to assist you in the best possible direction.
Nice Video, will definitely be buying some….is it possible that you can do a review on their colours?
i just got this same set in the mail, my dog tore into the box but luckily the packaging is so thick the ink didn't get ruined 😅
Daniel yuck is the ChrisFix of the tattoo world !
Can you use them on real skin?
That’s a great question!
Yes I have used them on human skin and it’s fantastic. I actually have some videos on my channel where I use this ink. I will link them below for you so you can check them out.
How To Stipple Whip Pepper Shade-Tattooing 101
th-cam.com/video/hHvei0UPhr8/w-d-xo.html
Shading A Rose Tattoo On Human Skin
th-cam.com/video/eaXZA81VI4g/w-d-xo.html
do you have a video on sterilization? I dont wanna have any mdeical issues with anyone once i do get to that stage. Noobie soon to be Elite! Been watching your videos for a little while during my exploring stage of tattooing. Appreciate you and your content!!
Dynamic has been around for years. Their triple black is the darkest I have found.
Thats good info to know. I myself have not personally tried out their triple black but maybe in the near future I can get my hands on some to check it out.
If I may, what do you use the triple black for on your end?
@@DanielYuck Lining and grey wash. It is so versatile. I recently used some of their lemon yellow and leaf green and both are very vibrant. I am actually switching over to their colors for daily use.
Who dislikes a video before even watching it 😂🤔
I know right! What is up with that? haha
🔥🔥
They all look same colour in this video
That’s why I always tell begginers use traditional machines first
Problem is with tradicional machines my hands go numb very quick.
My problem with coil machines is they shake way to much. My pen and rotary machines. They are more quite, easier to set up/break down. And in my experience coils give out faster then rotary machines as well
I think it is all subjective. I started with coils but I was not a fan of the setup or vibrations. Something about coils was a bit too much power for what I personally was looking for but I still spent some time under a coil prior to moving over to short style tattoo pen machines.
I have met a lot of people that like pen style machines, rotary, coils, stick and poke, etc. I do also feel it is never wrong or cant hurt to know how to properly assemble a coil setup.
@@TrueFFranco Yea I agree! I have hand problems as is haha so I needed something with low vibrations.
@@JoshuaGreen918 These are some of the key factors that helped me determine what style of machine I wanted to use. I personally prefer short pen style tattoo machines. Low noise, Low vibrations and easy to maintain, sterilize, etc.