Sunday, May 27, 2012

Tattoo Industry and Culture (part 1)
[As promised, here is the first section of the final article I wrote for my feature-writing class last semester on the tattoo industry and culture. It is just a little intro, highlighting the beginnings of one tattoo artist I have talked about a few times on this blog already, Brian Brenner of Truth & Triumph Tattoo. I hope you all enjoy it and come back for the other posts of the series.]


Brian Brenner grew up in the 1970s and 1980s listening to rock ‘n’ roll and old-school punk rock and hanging out with the “misfits” of his day. He said mainstream culture saw him and his friends as a “different breed of scumbag,” viewing them in only a slightly better light than bikers and criminals. And at the time, bikers and criminals were notorious for their tattoos. So it was not long before Brenner decided that getting tattooed fit who he was, given how society viewed him.


He got his first tattoo when he was 19, a tribal design on his right leg. Brenner has had a love for art all his life, but he did not immediately think of getting into the tattoo business until the owner of the shop he went to suggested the idea.

“I knew I didn't want to work a factory job or a grunt labor job for the rest of my life, and I loved art,” Brenner said. “I just never imagined doing it on people's skin until I'd received my second tattoo, and it was then I knew it was for me.”

Brenner began tattooing as a side job with a kit he had ordered from an old tattoo magazine when he was 21 or 22. He started doing tattoos at his kitchen table, with his first being a little rose on an ex-girlfriend. Eventually, Brenner was not satisfied with the money he was making airbrushing T-shirts in Myrtle Beach, S.C., so he decided to make tattooing his career and joined the crew New Breed Tattoo. But in the past two decades, Brenner has established himself as one of the top tattoo artists in the Dayton area with his own shop, Truth & Triumph Tattoo.

“I always remained loyal and worked at the shop that brought me into the business until I had a different vision for opening my own studio four or five years into tattooing,” he said. “That is what you know as Truth & Triumph today.”

Truth & Triumph Tattoo at 3250 Kettering Blvd. in Dayton, Ohio, where Brian Brenner and John Lloyd tattoo clients.



Since opening the shop, he has traveled the globe, showcasing his skills at conventions and having his work featured in prominent tattoo magazines. Brenner said that though in high school his peers saw him as the “class clown” and “least likely to succeed,” he now has exceeded everyone’s expectations by owning three successful tattoo shops.

In these three locations, he and his staff have done thousands of tattoos, some representing only a desire to check one item off a bucket list and others holding truly significant meanings to the wearers.


Sunday, May 20, 2012

Amber's Story
Amber grew up in a fairly conservative home where her cousin was the only one in her family with a tattoo, and Amber says “it was not looked favorably upon.” But Amber says that even at a young age there was a “rebellious” part of her that thought it might be fun to have a tattoo someday. She took that step and got a tattoo a year ago, after thinking about the design for a year.

Amber chose to get the Greek word for “grace” (“charis”) on the inside of her right ankle. She says she chose this because the concept of grace was something that was heavy on her mind after a previous rough relationship.



“I kept getting hit with the concept of grace and just the amount of grace that God has shown me,” she says. “And, given that, how could I ever hold any hurt that someone’s ever done against me against them, because God’s forgiven infinitely more of me.”

Initially, when she thought of getting her tattoo, Amber says she wanted “grace” in Hebrew. But after word studies, reading commentaries and talking with Bible majors here at Cedarville University, she decided the Greek word — defined as being “unmerited favor” — better described what she had in mind concerning grace.

Once she had her ideas set, she went to Truth & Triumph Tattoo in Dayton, where her tattoo artist drew up the design. Amber says that the design is not exactly true to the original Greek, which can have a harsh look to it, but that the tattoo is like an artistic representation of the Greek, being more “scripty” and “flowy.”





Amber says she thinks this will be her only tattoo, though she has always said that if her mom, dad, brother or sister died suddenly then she would get a memorial tattoo on the inside of her wrist. Other than that, she says that it would have to be something else really big in her life to call for getting inked again.

I hope you enjoyed Amber’s story behind her ink. I also hope that you all will meet me back here next week (or maybe even later this week) because my next few posts will be unique in that I will be posting an article on the tattoo industry that I wrote for a class last semester. For those of you who care, it is sort of a focus piece, beginning with the story of how Brian Brenner (the owner of Truth & Triumph) got into the industry and how his shop and the entire tattoo industry have grown. I really enjoyed writing it, so I hope you all will enjoy checking it out over the next few posts (I am breaking it up into a series because the piece as a whole is 2,000 words…not super conducive with a blog!) Until then, I hope you all have a blessed week!

Monday, May 14, 2012


My (Second) Story
So, this past Saturday I turned 20, and one of the few things I wanted was another tattoo. I had been thinking about this design for around 7 or 8 months, and with going home for my birthday I decided to go get the tattoo at the shop where I got my first tattoo. Coincidentally with being a walk-in client, I even got the same artist that did my first (which made me happy because he is awesome)! My experience as a whole was interesting and unique, but first I will talk about the design of my fresh ink.

My tattoo reads, “Be as wise as a serpent and as innocent as a dove.” This is a concept found in the Bible (Matt. 10:16b) when Jesus is sending out His original 12 disciples to go out to spread Jesus' teaching. But while going through Media Ethics this past fall semester, the principle was something that I could see myself applying not only to my desired profession (a journalist, specifically a sports writer) but also in every area of my life.



So, this tattoo holds great significance to me, and to emphasize my commitment to living this way I wanted the tattoo to be in my own handwriting. It may sound odd, but it was almost my way of making a covenant with God in permanent ink that I will seek to live this way for the rest of my life.

Now for my overall experience at Buddha’s Body Art this second time around: As I said before, I got the same artist I had last time, Rob. Since we did not talk much last time, I asked him when he started tattooing, and he said he was around 9 when he first picked up a tattoo gun. He has had over 35 years of experience, and he has only ever tattooed for Buddha’s because his parents opened the shop in the early 1960s. The shop has been kept in the family, with Rob’s mom still coming in to tattoo and Rob’s kids and nieces/nephews working in different capacities at the shop or aspiring to someday.

We also got to talking about some other things that Rob does, and he mentioned three accomplishments: being a deacon at this church, going through nursing classes (though I’m not exactly sure what sort of certification he has) and currently working through piloting school.

All in all, I had a really great time, and I have already gotten compliments about my tattoo, which I wore uncovered for the first time today! I hope you all enjoyed that story, too. I would love to hear from you, so please feel free to comment below. Also, if you have any tattoos you would like to showcase on my blog, let me know. I would be excited to hear from you! Thanks for reading, and I’ll see you back here next week.

(Another great thing about this time at Buddha's was Rob let my dad [whom I share a birthday with!] come back and take pictures):

The original outline of that design.




Getting bandaged up!

Monday, May 7, 2012

Jeff's Story
Jeff is an associate professor of urban ministry at Cedarville University, but there is something that sets him apart from many professors, especially here at Cedarville—his connection to tattoos.

Jeff says there is a drive within him that pushes him to do things that seem to be beyond his capacity.

“When I was in the Army, I didn’t want to just be a soldier; I wanted to be a paratrooper. So when I got into education, I didn’t want to just go to college; I wanted a doctorate. At middle age I started running, but I didn’t just want to run; I wanted to do a marathon.”

And Jeff found something new to strive for by accident when he injured his hip while running. He says that while he was cross-training on bikes to rehab his hip, he thought to himself that if he just added swimming he could do triathlons. And when he got into triathlons, that same innate drive compelled him to work toward doing an Ironman triathlon, which involves swimming 2.4 miles, biking 112 miles and running 26.2 miles.
 


Like many people who have finished an Ironman, Jeff decided to get a tattoo to mark his achievement.


“It’s just a way to kind of identify as part of an elite group. In the same way, if tattoos would have been more popular I would have probably gotten Jump Wings when I was in the Army as a paratrooper.”

But Jeff’s ink is not his only connection with tattoos. He also has a connection in that his son, Josh, is a tattoo artist for a well-known shop in the Dayton area, Truth & Triumph Tattoo. Josh specializes in script tattoos, and I have put a link to his portfolio below. I hope you will check it out because it is impressive!
http://www.tattooedtv.com/joshcook.html

Josh did his dad’s Ironman tattoo, but even Jeff admits that his tattoo pales in comparison to the tattoos Josh does on a regular basis.

“It’s like somebody who writes novels, and he wrote a sentence for me,” Jeff says.

I hope you enjoyed that story behind the ink. I had such a great time learning about it myself. I hope you all will meet me back here next week for more. Let me know what you think. Thanks!

Sunday, April 29, 2012

Bekah's Story
Sorry I was not able to post anything this past week. It was quite possibly the busiest week I have had since I have been off at school. But I am back now, and I am so excited to share Bekah’s story with you.


Bekah and I went to school together up through middle school (and if you remember Leah from my last post, this is her sister!) And though she grew up seeing her dad’s tattoos (then her brothers’ as she got a little bit older), she had a fear of needles that partially kept her from getting inked. But this past year and a half or so Bekah wanted a tattoo; particularly, one of a passage that has gotten her through these past couple of years that have grown her significantly.

She says this growing time in her life really started in July of 2010 when she went to the International House of Prayer for an internship. It’s there that she says she surrendered her life to Jesus Christ, seeing that to do so requires a believer to give his or her ALL to the Lord. One passage that especially spoke to her in this area was Psalm 62. This psalm relates God to an unshakable rock or fortress who offers rest and hope to believers through the salvation He alone provides.


And Bekah says verse 8 really stands out to her as it reads, “Trust in [God] at all times, O people; pour out your hearts to him, for God is our refuge.” She sees three things in this verse that believers should do as a testament to Jesus Christ being the Lord and Savior of their lives; these things are: 1) trust God, 2) pour their hearts out to Him and 3) see Him as their refuge. These keys are what she has tried to apply to her life these past couple years as she has waited on God to reveal what His purpose is for her life.

As of just this past Sunday, Bekah is in South Carolina, helping her brother with a ministry he is a part of. There she is teaching guitar lessons among other things and just enjoying this time in her life.

Plans for future tattoos for Bekah also revolve around concepts in Scripture. She is considering getting text that reads, “I have given you a new name” (in reference to how God makes us new creations at salvation) or “my beloved one” (to remind her of God’s love for her) or something of the like. I just hope that whatever she gets that she will let me do a post about it!

I hope you all enjoyed that story and maybe were challenged by it. Shoot me a comment to let me know what you think! I hope to see you all back here next week for a different kind of story behind the ink. [SPOILER: it involves a professor here at Cedarville who has a tattoo; he’s super cool, so you won’t want to miss that one!]

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Leah's Story
Leah is like many people I have talked to about tattoos in that she had always wanted one, but did not know exactly what she wanted; all she knew is that she wanted it to be something meaningful. The meaningful concept that spoke to her was that of the example of the Proverbs 31 woman.


“I have always been fascinated with the passage in Proverbs 31 that talks about being a virtuous woman. And I came across a page on Facebook called ‘I'd Rather Have a Proverbs 31 Woman than a Victoria's Secret Model,’ and when I came across that I really started studying Proverbs 31 in detail and breaking it down and stuff.”

After studying this passage, Leah says she felt like getting “Proverbs 31” on her wrist would serve as a reminder of the kind of woman she is striving to be, the kind of woman God has called her (and all women) to be.

So after finding a script she liked, she went into Buddha’s in Erie (where I got my tattoo) and ended up getting an artist there who is a Christian. She says she enjoyed her experience, and that she loves her tattoo. The tattoo has even opened some doors for her to share her faith with other people she comes in contact with.

The passage is pretty lengthy, so I won’t transcribe it all for you, but I would like to give you all the gist of it because it is really good. The section on a virtuous woman starts at Proverbs 31:10 with, “A wife of noble character, who can find? She is worth far more than rubies.” The chapter goes on to describe the woman as being responsible and hardworking when it comes to supporting her family and reaching out to the poor and needy. And in her family relations, the virtuous woman brings her husband “good, not harm, all the days of her life” and watches over the affairs of her household so well that her husband and children revere her.

One of my personal favorite verses comes near the end of the chapter in verse 30, which reads, “Charm is deceptive, and beauty is fleeting; but a woman who fears the Lord is to be praised.”

It is so true! We can flatter people all we want to get our ways, but really it’s just manipulation. And beauty is subjective and they significantly change with time. But a person’s character, the essence of who he or she is, will be the lasting definition that is left behind when that person passes away. And the book of Proverbs would argue that a person leaves behind the best legacy when his or her character is in line with the will of God and the teaching of Scripture.

Well, it is nice to get back into writing about the side of tattoos that I especially love — the stories behind them! I hope you all enjoyed it. If you have any tattoos that could show up on the blog, let me know because I am trying to recruit more people so I can keep this up, because I love doing this! I hope you all have a great week. Thanks for reading!

Sunday, April 8, 2012

An Article Especially for Easter
It feels so good to finally be back here. Sorry it has been so long; things have been super busy with school, so I think I will be cutting back to posting once a week.

And with this Easter weekend, I have thought a lot about my own tattoo experience because I got mine on Good Friday last year, and the guy beside me was getting the entire Lord's Prayer on his bicep.

With that said, religious tattoos are something that I find to be extremely interesting. And though I cannot relate to the people in this linked blog post, I still thought I would pass it along to you all, because it was really unique. I hope you all like it!

http://www.tmatt.net/2012/03/26/lent-and-easter-in-blood-sweat-and-ink/

I'll see you all next week. Thanks for checking out this unique story behind the ink!