On my last day in Hawai'i I had some time to kill before my flight. I wanted to stay close to the airport, so I headed over to Pearlridge Center to do some last minute shopping.
One of the first people I met was Dottie, a Kentuckian who had moved to Oahu.
She had this touching tattoo on her calf:
It is a memorial piece for her father, who was a constable back in Kentucky. Sadly, he was killed in the line of duty in 1984. The rose is part of the shield he wore and she incorporated it into the tattoo design.
Thanks to Dottie for sharing this emotional tattoo with us here on Tattoosday.
Update: Dottie has filled me in on some missing details.
The tattoo was inked at Big Daddy's Tattoos in Elizabethtown, Kentucky. She also wanted to clarify that the shield with the rose is the symbol for the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund and encourages people, if interested in the memorial, to visit the website here.
Showing posts with label badge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label badge. Show all posts
Saturday 22 May 2010
Thursday 23 October 2008
Melanie's Traditional Revolvers
As I mentioned above (here), Melanie crossed my path on a day last week when I had been having some bad luck with inkspotting.
However, when I saw her on 34th Street across from Macy*s, I had to talk to her about her tattoos.
What caught my eye first was her chest piece, two traditional Sailor Jerry designs, including a near replica of the neck piece sported by Buddy Nielsen of Senses Fail.
She told me an artist named Kenny up in Kingston, New York had inked the chest piece, but instead of photographing that, she offered up her stomach piece instead:
The reason for her offering this other piece is that it was tattooed by the artist she is currently working with, Cookie, at Pop's Tattoo Emporium in Kingston.
Melanie got her first tattoo at sixteen and fell in love with the traditional style. When I asked her how many she had, she had the typical response of the heavily-inked: she wasn't sure.
The guns and roses along the waistline are a traditional motif and part of her desire for ink is to fill in space, to keep working with the body's canvas. The sheriff's badge exemplifies this, as she noted it was added as an afterthought.
The "City of Sin" identification on the badge is consistent with the piece's theme, and it artistically brings the whole tattoo together, centering the focus at the ends of the gun barrels, and providing a stronger sense of balance in the design.
Thanks so much to Melanie for sharing her traditional holsters with us here on Tattoosday!
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