Ink Meets Metal offers tattoos, cycles, bands Casper Star-Tribune Online Hundreds of tattoo and motorcycle enthusiasts flocked to the event to get inked by tattoo artists from around the country. The pen isn't mightier than the sword. At the annual Ink Meets Metal tattoo convention and motorcycle show, the pen is the sword. |
Count on Kid Ink to draw a crowd DesMoinesRegister.com Before he started covering his body with tattoos, Bryan Collins (aka Kid Ink) used to draw his own temporary tattoos with a pen. He was inspired by the tattoos on basketball star Allen Iverson and Blink-182 drummer Travis Barker. |
Chefs' ink Sydney Morning Herald Photo: Jon Reid Forget toques and chef's whites, the men and women manning commercial stovetops are choosing an altogether more permanent form of tribal recognition - the tattoo. Enter Tasmanian chef Steven Cumper and his tongue-in-cheek tweet: "Do ... |
GI tattoo artist appreciates art in many forms Grand Island Independent Alary Layman, 32, co-owns GI Ink, a tattoo shop at 220 W. Second St., but his talent extends far beyond creating custom tattoos for patrons who pay $100 an hour for his work. Last month, he won a $1000 grand prize for a portrait of a Japanese girl ... |
Triton Tattoo sees strong demand for body art Royal Gazette By Marina Mello Getting some ink: Triton Tattoo owner Gary Macpherson and tattoo artist Vinicius Caldas with a client yesterday at the St George?s studio. (Photo by Glenn Tucker) At work: Vinicius Caldas works on a client at the new Triton Tattoo ... |