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Colorful Body Artwork is Bonding Some Families (Tattoos Bring Mom & Daughter Together)
Wisconsin State Journal ^ | January 8, 2007 | Nikki KAtz

Posted on 01/08/2007 2:12:54 PM PST by Diana in Wisconsin

When Lori Nichols of Oregon, WI was in her late 20s, she once asked her mom to baby-sit without revealing where she was going.

"When I got back hours later, I showed her why she was watching the kids," Nichols said, turning to show off the red rose she had tattooed on her shoulder.

"I thought she'd be mad, but she was jealous," Nichols said. "(I didn't know) my mom always wanted a yellow rose . . . She wanted one, but she was stuck with (my dad) for so long."

Ever since her mom died in September 2004, Nichols has wanted to get a yellow rose to accompany the red rose on her shoulder. Or maybe on her right arm, opposite the ram's head on her left arm that she got in honor of her younger brother Chad, who died one day after their mom, and sported a ram tattoo.

Nichols' daughter, Amber Dawson of Stoughton, is on the same page. Not long after her 18th birthday in August, Dawson decided to get a picture of two angels on her left shoulder to represent her maternal grandmother and uncle.

"(Their deaths) affected our family so much, and I just wanted to honor them," Dawson said. "One of my close friends is not very supportive of it. She says there are other ways I could've remembered them, but this is the way I choose to do it . . . I want them to look over my shoulder and protect me."

Madison's 10 tattoo parlors draw young adults and adults alike to invest in body art. Just look around, and you'll see it everywhere, on everyone, from elderly women to teens who don't look quite of-age. Dawson said she's already planning her next tattoo, possibly a Virgo symbol on her foot.

"I guess when they say they're addicting, they're not lying," she said, glancing at her mom.

"I can't say nothing," Lori said, laughing. "I have more than two.

"It's a person's choice, and I truly believe that," she added. "She's 18, and it's her choice to make."

A bonding experience

Seated in the lobby of Ultimate Arts Tattoo, Nichols seems like one of those cool moms even a high schooler would have no problem hanging out with. She and her daughter look alike, both peering out through their eyeliner under their blonde hair. Dawson said she appreciates her mom more now than ever before.

But the two haven't always been so close. Dawson moved out of her mom's Stoughton house just a couple weeks after her 18th birthday. She said they "weren't on good terms."

Dawson attributes their tattoos in part for their new closeness.

"I was afraid she wouldn't come (to my tattoo sessions)," Dawson said. "It means a lot that she did."

When asked if they would ever consider getting matching tattoos, Nichols and Dawson giggled.

"We actually really do have the same taste," Dawson said, shifting her eyes to her mom. Nichols smiled.

How the kids are doing it

Teens less patient than Dawson find ways to get around Wisconsin's law prohibiting minors from getting tattoos.

Mike Spangler, the owner of Ultimate Arts Tattoo, 3236 Commercial Ave., Madison, said minors frequently get tattoos at "tattoo parties," house parties at which low-quality or failed tattoo artists work, often not carrying out the proper cross-contamination procedures. Considering health risks like HIV and hepatitis, Spangler stressed, "Parents need to be scared of this."

Spangler said tattoo parlors that take minors are not much better.

"Someone younger than 18, if they find a studio, it can't be a high-quality place," he said. "They're probably untrained, and with the health issues, it's most likely regrettable."

His advice? "Do not let (minors) get a tattoo. Period."

Spangler said his two stepchildren begged to get underage tattoos, but he didn't crack. When the oldest, now 21, got a tattoo on his 18th birthday, Spangler said it meant a lot more to him after having to wait.

"It's kind of a rite of passage," he said. " Everyone's got to move from childhood to adulthood somehow. It's a step from what you can do as a kid to what you can do as an adult."

Ultimate Arts Tattoo employee Tonia Weber, 26, said teens are more likely to do something they'll regret later.

Weber, who specializes in tattoo removal, has seen quite the range of regretted tattoos in her six years at the parlor. She said the worst were usually adolescent decisions.

"I once did a woman who's now a mother of four, but when she was 16, she got crosses up and down on her arm," Weber said. "She came in and said, 'This is just not me.'

"Another woman had a smiley face on her entire back all done with needle and thread. It was pretty shoddy, and she was pretty adamant about having it gone. Of course, she was 16 when she got it."

Removal is illegal for minors except for laser removal by a physician and a judge's mandate, which usually regards gang tattoos. To remove a tattoo in the shop, Weber has to penetrate cells with a machine to liquefy the solidified tattoo ink. She said it was a "difficult and painful process," not to mention expensive. Removing a small tattoo costs at least $50, and Weber charges $100 per hour for a large one. Laser removal can cost thousands of dollars and often takes seven to 10 sessions.

Considering the consequences, Weber said she thinks getting a tattoo at a party is "really sad."

"I don't think there's any thought put into it," Weber said. "They're drunk, so they do something stupid . . . They're just going to spend more money to get it fixed later."

More mainstream

With 11 tattoos, Weber said she doesn't plan on stopping anytime soon. She has a "sleeve" tattoo down her entire left arm and she's getting her entire right arm done as well. She said she's run into some really negative responses with which she disagrees.

"Someone that says a tattoo is gross...is ignorant," Weber said. "Some people are very accepting. The non-accepting ones are back in the 1960s, thinking they use gross needles."

Weber said her visible chest and arm tattoos have really affected her public life.

"I can't go into a store with a short sleeved shirt without someone coming up to me and grabbing my arm or saying 'that's cool,'" she said. "It's a real lack of private or personal space.

"You might be the only person with a tattoo in a room of a hundred people, and they're going to notice. They'll say, 'Oh my god, this person is weird or different.' We still get labeled a little bit."

But Spangler said that's all changing. With the sleeves of his fleece pushed up and eloquent speech, the only evidence that Spangler might be the "type" to have a tattoo is his long hair and ear piercing. He said a large percentage of his clients are professionals, citing police officers, doctors and professors. He said he thinks that as tattoos are becoming more common, parents of teenagers are becoming more comfortable with them.

"Parents are much more lenient when it comes to tattoos," he said. "It's more mainstream...most of the parents have them."

Body piercer Michael Beale, who's worked at Steve's Tattoo and Body Piercing, 1205 Williamson St., for four years, agreed.

"A lot more families come into the store," Beale said. "Dads and moms bring their kids in on their 18th birthday . . . It's probably because of cleanliness. They'd just rather bring their kid in here than have them get it done in their buddy's garage."

Beale said the shop gets a few calls a year from happy parents, which sometimes take the employees off-guard.

"Just a few weeks ago, this girl's dad called and said, 'Is the manager there?' and I'm thinking 'Oh, no,' " Beale said. "But he said, 'Just tell him so-and-so's dad wanted to call and say thanks.' "

High school tattoos

It seems Stoughton High School has embraced the prevalence of tattoos. The school newspaper annually features a matching game between pictures of tattoos and students' names.

"When you're a senior, you're 18, and (tattoos) are accepted," Dawson said.

As senior class principal of La Follette High School, Kelly Lynaugh said she's seen it all in the hallways - tattoos and piercings "wherever they find to put them."

"Parents feel it's the right of the student to express their feelings," Lynaugh said, pointing out that she thinks parents are still "more OK with" piercings than tattoos.

Like most Madison public high schools, La Follette doesn't have many regulations about either one. The only rule the administration enforces is that body art displaying inappropriate words be covered. One student, Lynaugh said, has to wear long pants everyday because he has a curse word tattoo on his calf. Lynaugh said all types of students have tattoos, from those with discipline or academic problems to those who get straight-As.

"It's across the board," she said.

"I think tattoos have always been attractive to younger people because of the rebellion aspect of them," said Beale, who's getting a "body-suit" tattoo to cover almost his whole body.

Beale said the only tattoo he regrets is the wedding ring tattoo he got six years ago. Now that he's divorced, he's planning to get it lasered off.

"That's the thing," he said. "I would tell teenagers who are going to get a tattoo to choose something they want for life."


TOPICS: Arts/Photography; Society
KEYWORDS: culturewar; frbigots; parentsnotfriends; skankitude; strippermommy; trailertrashtats; trampstamp
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To: HOTTIEBOY

Excellent points Hottie. I'll never understand such bitterness and hate all because of ink on a person's skin.


81 posted on 01/09/2007 7:47:15 AM PST by conservativebabe
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To: conservativebabe

I don't think it has anything to do with ink on skin.

I think there are alot of factors ~ the biggest one being "greater-than-thou" attitudes.

If it wasn't tattoos, it would be something else.


82 posted on 01/09/2007 7:57:25 AM PST by HOTTIEBOY ("dingleberry" LOL! You guys crack me up.....)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

This morning's page one story was self-mutilation. What a pathetic rag Madison has for a newspaper!


83 posted on 01/09/2007 8:00:00 AM PST by hubbubhubbub
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To: HOTTIEBOY

Love the stories on your page. Very nice pictures too.


84 posted on 01/09/2007 8:40:43 AM PST by pandoraou812 ( zero tolerance and dilligaf?)
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To: HOTTIEBOY
Please say that you are not that stupid.

I think that'd make the poster a liar.

Good post, HB.

85 posted on 01/09/2007 8:50:03 AM PST by Hemingway's Ghost (Spirit of '75)
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To: HOTTIEBOY

you're right.


86 posted on 01/09/2007 9:27:22 AM PST by conservativebabe
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To: pandoraou812
Wow everybody here hates tats.

not everyone, but i think there an anti tat group that goes looking for these threads to attack them.
i'm pro-tat, as long as its good art. i have 12 myself.
87 posted on 01/09/2007 9:28:47 AM PST by absolootezer0 (stop repeat offenders - don't re-elect them!)
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To: absolootezer0
I was just amazed at some of the comments. I couldn't believe how ignorant some were.

When I see a "scroll" across a young woman's back I immediately come to one conclusion - that she's a tramp

Four points also appears highly correlated with STD, unfaithfulness, and infertility. Such four pointer losers should be avoided like the plague in my view.

Anybody who says sex wasn't in their mind when they got their tongue pierced is a liar, too. More advertizing, "I'm a slut."

I was truly shocked by the stupidity of some of these. You have a tat so that makes you have STD's and infertility? I hate to disappoint that guy bit I have never had a STD and I have 6 children although 2 are adopted. I must be pretty fertile since I had a child at 41 yrs old too......He is the one who said ..... Anybody who says sex wasn't in their mind when they got their tongue pierced is a liar, too. More advertizing, "I'm a slut." .... I still see he hasn't answered if that includes Men with tongue piercings.... I love my tats and I have many but I had them put in places where I can cover them up or show them off if I want . I just find it odd people have to be so judgmental..... I have many, even a little beauty mark on my face which was put there to cover a scar from a mole removal. I have quite a few friends who own shops and all of them are good artists. I did learn to put sunscreen on my tats early on....I have one thats over 20 years old and it still has great color and the lines are not blurry. Thanks for the post... I was really upset that now I am a white trash, tramp, slut and skank in some people's narrow stupid minds. ~~Pandora~~
88 posted on 01/09/2007 9:58:48 AM PST by pandoraou812 ( zero tolerance and dilligaf?)
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To: pandoraou812
I was really upset that now I am a white trash, tramp, slut and skank in some people's narrow stupid minds.

you're only a tramp if you have the lower back scrollwork. :P
out of curiousity.. do you suppose the same mark applies to men? one of my (male) friends has a rather large tribal scroll across that spot.
89 posted on 01/09/2007 10:08:47 AM PST by absolootezer0 (stop repeat offenders - don't re-elect them!)
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To: absolootezer0

Oh darn I have a butterfly scroll across my lower back so I am a tramp. I doubt your male friend is a tramp it doesn't seem to apply to men .


90 posted on 01/09/2007 10:12:45 AM PST by pandoraou812 ( zero tolerance and dilligaf?)
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To: pandoraou812

yeah, apparently only the "white trash" part applies to us men.


91 posted on 01/09/2007 10:16:35 AM PST by absolootezer0 (stop repeat offenders - don't re-elect them!)
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To: absolootezer0
The same mark does not apply to men because the remarks make no sense whatsoever.

Its like you said, the posters come to flame anything.
Motorcyclists are in gangs, women with tattoos are sluts and have STD, ANY celebrity that is seen out at night is a tramp, beer drinkers are wifebeating alcoholics, unmarried folk that live together are contributing to serial killers ~ yes, I have heard all these...

And when young girls are simply trying to be popular by getting their tongue pierced, they are not just young and dumb. Noooo, they are thinking about S.E.X. and their parents should be locked away in institutions for contributing to the downfall of society.
92 posted on 01/09/2007 10:30:25 AM PST by HOTTIEBOY ("dingleberry" LOL! You guys crack me up.....)
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To: najida

Hey Naj!!

How are you? Still having a rough day? Cyber massage coming at you.

HottieGirl says Hi!!


93 posted on 01/09/2007 10:37:58 AM PST by HOTTIEBOY ("dingleberry" LOL! You guys crack me up.....)
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To: absolootezer0
Well if you're white trash we can be friends because I am all of the above mentioned things although I didn't know it until last night. Unless you don't like me cause I got that tramp stamp......~~Pandora~~
94 posted on 01/09/2007 11:04:05 AM PST by pandoraou812 ( zero tolerance and dilligaf?)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

yes sirreee...nothing like having this "thing" following you wherever you go for the rest of your life.....


95 posted on 01/09/2007 11:06:40 AM PST by auto power
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To: HOTTIEBOY

I'm better,
the day is better,
thanks so much for the massage!

Tell HottieGirl I'm serious about the cake (or 'nanner puddin') offer. I'll even bring it to the house :)


96 posted on 01/09/2007 11:11:30 AM PST by najida (If it wasn't for fast food, I'd have no food at all.)
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To: pandoraou812

What is so funny to me,
is that in the dance community, anything on the lower back
is part of the costume....

If someone has great ommis, cobras, hip 8's of any kind, the 'tat' moves and makes the movement even that more impressive.

Never, EVER dawned on me that it was something skanky....to me, it's gorgeous!


97 posted on 01/09/2007 11:13:56 AM PST by najida (If it wasn't for fast food, I'd have no food at all.)
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To: najida

I will tell her.

Of course, she's practically my wife now. I call her my wife all the time. 'Girlfriend' sounds too...I don't know.

Everyone knows who I am talking about when I say 'my wife'

She will be soon.
Now, about this nanner puddin.....


98 posted on 01/09/2007 11:17:55 AM PST by HOTTIEBOY ("dingleberry" LOL! You guys crack me up.....)
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To: Jaysun

Here in Houston, we call that lower-back scroll tattoo a Tramp Stamp.

Or if it's more-or-less round, a Coaster.


99 posted on 01/09/2007 11:18:19 AM PST by Xenalyte (Anything is possible when you don't understand how anything happens.)
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To: HOTTIEBOY

LOL!
Yeah, y'all are married in all the ways that matter. And I love it when she drops by (cuz yer her little schmoopie ;))

As for the nanner puddin'....We'll talk :)


100 posted on 01/09/2007 11:24:45 AM PST by najida (If it wasn't for fast food, I'd have no food at all.)
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