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Skyrim tattoos, alternatives to an arrow on knee

Posted in : Gossips, Tattoos

(added few months ago!)

Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim is one of the most popular games played at the moment, some are even that addicted to it they play all the hours under the sun, some even get tattoos to prove their love for the game.
“I Took an Arrow in the Knee” is a phrase via the RPG Skyrim, this phrase became famous when a guard in Winterhold said “I used to be an adventurer like you, then I took an arrow to the knee”. If you look at the picture below that was posted on FunnyJunk, is a tattoo by artist Nikkisny, you will see the “Arrow in the knee” tattooed onto the fan. Careers were cut short because you had a knee injury, kind of funny when you look at it like that.

Skyrim tattoos, alternatives to an arrow on knee

What extreme would you go to, to show your love for Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim? Well judging on a few more photos we posted below, it clearly shows the love, and a lot of it. One of the pictures below shows off the Tiber Septim warrior hero of the nord people, this tattoo rewards the after death to join the 8 divines as the 9th, the divine Talos, please let us know if we are right. Check out more Elder Scrolls tattoos below, if you were to get a Skyrim tattoo what would it be?

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A QR-Code Tattoo: The Future of Ink or a Big Mistake?

Posted in : Tattoos, Videos

(added few months ago!)

A fellow named Fred Bosch (no relation to your Future Tense blogger, to the best of my knowledge of the family tree) decided to get a tattoo that could never grow stale. No, not henna or a temporary tattoo. Bosch got himself inked with a QR code. This itself is not new—QR code tattoos have surfaced before, even drawing the paranoid attention of conspiracy theorist Alex Jones. The novel twist here? If you snap two photos of Bosch’s tattoo with your smartphone, it won’t pull up the same thing. Bosch’s invention was to make his QR code pull up randomly generated images. CNet’s Amanda Kooser writes, “The code may pop up with a GIF of a couple of headbangers swinging their hair around, or a recent tweet, a phrase, a video, or a weather report. Bosch calls it the first-ever random tattoo.”

Kooser points out one potential downside of the ink: If his skin starts to sag, might Bosch’s tattoo lose its functionality? I see another potential problem. While the QR code’s death may not be here yet, it’s entirely possible, even likely, that it will fade in favor of other interactive, scannable media in the coming decades. And then how will Bosch explain his body art to his grandchildren? It would be like having a Walkman tattoo.

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Tattoo you

Posted in : Gossips, Tattoos

(added few months ago!)

Tattoo youMatt Lloyd left Nelson as a teenager with a budding fascination for tattoos. He talks to Geoff Collett about what happened next. If you don't know Matt Lloyd and you see him in the street, you may well give him a wide berth. It happens, he admits, at least when he's back in the old home town.

Those who do know him would probably be amused by the thought of strangers avoiding him. From the first meeting, he strikes as nothing if not affable – talkative, thoughtful, funny, a heap of good yarns to tell, and probably a few hair-raising ones to boot. His mum says he's got a heart of gold. It's easy to believe.

But it's the tattoos. All over his arms, up his neck, his throat; you wouldn't need to see him shirtless or in shorts to guess they creep across his chest and stomach, down his back, over his legs.

He estimates he's got two-thirds of his body covered, and more being added whenever the chance offers itself. Where he lives these days – the United States most recently, quite a bit in Europe – nobody much would notice, and any judging would likely be limited to assessing the merits of the artwork inked all over him. But back home; well, he suggests we've got some catching up to do.

Matt Lloyd is one of those lucky sorts who has combined passion and profession. He loves tattoos, and has since he started obsessing over them as a teenager growing up in Nelson, watching kids on American skateboarding videos, decorated in ink; since he used his artistic bent at school to doodle designs he imagined illustrating the human form.

Sixteen years later, "I live and breathe it. My life is tattooing, 24/7". Ask him what he likes about it and he starts responding with something about people who appreciate his creativity enough to carry it with them for the rest of their days, then interrupts himself.

"When somebody asks me a question like that I realise I live in a different world," he says. "Everybody I hang out with is a tattooer ... I just get a heck of a rush off it. I enjoy making people happy, too. It is nice to do something that 99.9 per cent of the people I interact with, it seems to make their life better."

He's got good at it, too. He is building an international reputation for the quality of his tattooing, working around the world, being invited to work in ever-more prestigious studios. While in one way he's just another example of the great Nelson diaspora – of the town's young talent escaping to the bigger, more enticing possibilities of the outside world – his could be considered an especially unconventional skill.

After all, even his generation – he's about to turn 34 – isn't much removed from the age when tattooing was the stuff of dens of iniquity and of many parents' worst nightmares. His mother, Fay, says she has never been overly judgmental of her children's life choices, but still admits that when her then-seventh form son talked to her about getting a tattoo she was cool on the idea.

He did anyway: as he recalls it, "I got this completely horrible tribal tattoo on my arm – I got that back in 1995, finished the seventh form, hit Dunedin for the summer and I was away laughing." (His mother's recollection is that "apparently he had two tattoos on his shoulders, which he hid from me for ages.")

Not that she was really bothered. Besides, 16 years on, the strongest evidence of the pride she takes in her son's career choice is that she now bears three of his tattoos, on her shoulder, back and leg; her husband, Wayne, has even more.

Back in the mid-1990s, tattooing was still a mysterious, closed-off world, and Matt Lloyd knew he wasn't going to break into it by drawing doodles in Nelson. "My goal's never been to be the best tattooer in the world, and there's no way of measuring that anyway," he says.

"But I knew I wanted to be one of the best. And to be able to say you're one of the best, or good at something, you have to go out there and find out where the boundaries are, and I knew for a fact the boundaries weren't in Nelson, New Zealand."

He headed to England and wrangled himself an apprenticeship in a small town. He had no idea what he didn't know, as he tells it now, but quickly fell in love with the scene, even if his day job was mostly tattooing the local football hooligans and applying "tramp stamps" (those lower-back tribal tattoos popular among certain women over the last couple of decades) to the local ladies.

He was good enough, though, to draw wider attention to himself. He soon got an offer of work with a leading studio in Edinburgh, his first step in a lengthy, wide-ranging journey through the tattooing scene of Europe, America and parts of Asia.

For most of the past two years, he was based in Fayetteville, North Carolina – the site of the huge Fort Bragg military base, which provided him with a steady flow of customers from US Special Forces personnel, the Green Berets.

Mr Lloyd credits that experience with taking his work to yet another level, to a standard where he has now been able to move to the "upper echelon of other people's shops". He has most recently been working out of the leading Seattle studio, Slave to the Needle.

Now he is back in Nelson for a couple of months, doing a bit of work out of Gizmos, but also reminding himself of how far behind the tattooing world much of New Zealand is. He's sure that it is only time before that changes. "Overseas it's very mainstream now, it's seen as a very viable business, a very competitive business ... We're pretty much high street now."

He points to his customer base to make the point. Other than Green Berets, they're mostly professionals, he says – lawyers, doctors and the like. Partly that reflects that much of middle America no longer has the spare cash for elaborate tattoos; but mostly, he insists it shows how widely accepted, normalised even, tattoos are in the big, wide world.
 
His mum vouches for him, recalling her own trips to visit her son abroad. "I was amazed how it's all middle-aged-upwards people that have got lots of money that are getting all these beautiful tattoos," she says. "It's a totally different scene to years ago when it was just bikies or whatever."

Mr Lloyd is convinced that eventually, New Zealand – even provincial New Zealand – will follow suit. He is even planning to help make it happen. His American wife, Tarra, wants to move to Nelson to live, and while he has more overseas commitments to meet during 2012, he is contemplating setting up shop back here, and creating a market on the strength of both his experience and his contacts.

"If I do come back, I'll definitely be coming back with a bit of a bang; I'll be bringing an international shop where we'll have some of the best artists coming to visit for a month at a time, things like that."

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Unlicensed tattooist fined for inking 14-year-old girl

Posted in : Gossips, Tattoos

(added few months ago!)

Allan Fenton inked the words "no regrets" on the girl's shoulder then charged her £25 for the illegal brand. Fenton, 24, had no licence to give tattoos, but ran a word-of-mouth business from his home in Dundee's Gotterstone Drive. He was caught when police and council licensing officers raided his home and found what a sheriff described as "quite an operation" in a bedroom.

Unlicensed tattooist fined for inking 14-year-old girl

Fenton had surgical tapes and gloves, rolls of cling film, five tattooing machines, a tattooing table and armrests in his room. Fiscal depute Gillian Sim told Dundee Sheriff Court: "Between July 21 and 23 the girl and a friend attended at the accused's home address.

"The accused tattooed the 14-year-old child at the cost of £25. The following day a search was carried out and the accused was found at home where he co-operated fully. "Within his bedroom a large amount of equipment was traced for carrying out tattooing."

Fenton, of Gotterstone Drive, Dundee, pleaded guilty to charges of running a tattooing business without a licence and tattooing a 14-year-old girl, contrary to the Tattooing of Minors Act 1969, between July 21 and 23 at his home. Sheriff Derek O'Carroll fined Fenton £360 and said: "The point of the legislation is that tattooing is potentially a dangerous act that can potentially case infection.

"The way that you were carrying out this in your back bedroom shows there was no supervision at all. However, there is no evidence of any harm being caused by you."Earlier in the year, Central Scotland Police launched a crackdown on unlicensed tattoo artists after reports that a number of children under the age of 18 were given illegal inkings at a house party in the Falkirk area.

Public health specialist Dr Henry Prempeh said: "A tattoo can lead to serious infection if it is not done by a trained tattoo artist. The risks increase significantly if tattooing is carried out in premises that are not fit for purpose and regularly maintained."

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Give and Get This Holiday: Memphis-Area Tattoo Shop Offers Tats for Toys

Posted in : Gossips, Tattoos

(added few months ago!)

For those looking to give back and get a little something in return over the holidays, a Memphis-area tattoo parlor is offering free tattoos for toys. Customers who donate an unopened toy worth at least $25 will receive a tattoo or piercing of equal value at the House of Ink Shop’s fourth annual “Toys for Tattoos” drive. Owner Jay Guzman, known as “Big Jay,” has been flooded with customers during the three-day drive, which benefits local children in need. As the Frayser, Tenn., store opened today, Guzman said three people were already in the waiting room to get inked. One customer has come in three times since Monday and gotten a different tattoo with each donation, Guzman said.

Give and Get This Holiday Memphis-Area Tattoo Shop Offers Tats for Toys

The toys collected go to the Agape Child and Family Services, a non-profit Christian organization that distributes them to local children and families in need. Last year’s drive resulted in approximately 500 toys. This year, Guzman said the shop has about $300-worth of toys so far and $500 in cash that will go towards purchasing toys for older kids and teens. “A lot of people don’t have toys for 13- to 14-year-olds,” Guzman said, adding that he bought a few used iPods to donate to kids in that age group. “[It's important] that we’re able to donate to a child that is at the critical age when they can begin to have resentment to society.”Now in its fourth year, Guzman said the drive was slower than in the past, when “we couldn’t even get in the shop some days.”“It has a lot to do with the economy, but that’s the reason why we do it,” he said. “There are people that are in need.”

The “Toys for Tattoos” promotion ends at midnight tonight, but the House of Ink will be collecting toys and cash donations through Dec. 17. To Guzman, who grew up in foster care and group homes, the drive is a small way to give back. “For me, it goes back to that Kevin Spacey movie, ‘Pay It Forward,’” he said. “I was told I would amount to nothing. I was that kid that didn’t have a toy under the tree. If I listened to that negativity, I would be nothing. But I listened to that positive side and now I can give back with my artistic talents to that child that’s on the brink, that one who’s ready to give up.”

Naughty Ways to Be Nice
The House of Ink isn’t the only business offering up its services this season for a good cause.
A medical marijuana dispensary in Soquel, Calif., is also doing its part to feed the hungry, trading joints for donated food. For every six cans of food donated at Granny Purps dispensary’s second-annual food drive, patients can get one free joint.

As ABC News’ Clayton Sandell reported, the dispensary collected more than 12,000 pounds of food last year and gave away about 2,000 joints. This year, they’ve collected nearly 5,000 pounds since early November.

Others have come up with some naughty ways to be nice. The Admiral Theater, a Chicago strip club, is running its second annual “Lap Dances for the Needy” promotion, where customers can get a free lap dance with a toy donation, according to the Chicagoist. The deal is limited to one lap dance per customer and runs through Dec. 17 to benefit local churches.

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Drake Fan Tattoos Her Devotion On Forehead

Posted in : Gossips, Tattoos

(added few months ago!)

Even though Drake’s newest track with Rick Ross titled “Free Spirit”, rhymes that you should, “Tat my name on you so I know it’s real,” we’re pretty sure this isn’t the picture he had in mind! Alas, a devoted LA fan payed the “ultimate respect” to Wheelchair Jimmy by tattooing Drake’s name across her forehead. She even had her eyebrows shaved in preparation… Yikes!

Drake Fan Tattoos Her Devotion On Forehead

Kevin Campbell, the LA tattoo artist at Will Rise, insists that the young girl was not drunk and that she seemed very excited to get her tattoo started. He said: “She was really psyched about it. She had the sh—y font all picked out on her iPhone ready to go and was pretty adamant about putting it on her forehead. She didn’t say a word about what it meant to her. She acted as if she had planned it out for awhile; though I’m not really sure how much extended coherent thought could actually go into getting such a stupid tattoo on your forehead.”

So Kevin went through with the tattoo, doing as good a job as anyone could do… given the request. After the needle had been put down and the blood had been wiped, the freshly tattooed girl – who will continue to remain nameless – had a complete change of mood upon seeing her “work of art.” (But, she chose to go through with it – It’s her own fault, right??)

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Frayser tattoo shop artists exchange ink for children's toys

Posted in : Gossips, Tattoos

(added few months ago!)

"There's no way you can prepare yourself," said Carey, the 39-year-old piercing professional, tattoo artist and shop manager at House of Ink Tattoo Shop in Frayser. Carey doesn't usually count the number of people who come in during the annual Toys for Tattoos event; there are simply too many people donating Christmas toys in exchange for a tattoo or piercing to keep track.

Frayser tattoo shop artists exchange ink for children's toys"One year it blew my mind that I got a phone call saying, 'Hey, you do know that there's a line outside your shop?' They'd started lining up two hours before we opened," said "Big Jay" Guzman, 37, artist and owner of House of Ink.

This year's Toys for Tattoos event runs from today until Wednesday, 1 p.m. to midnight. Customers who bring in new, unopened toys worth $25 or more will receive a tattoo or piercing of equal value in exchange. It is the fourth toy drive for House of Ink and its second time working with Agape Child and Family Services, the 42-year-old organization that will help distribute the toys to families in need.

"Everybody associates tattoo artists with being criminals, bikers, degenerates -- and I'm a believing Christian and I believe what better way to be Christ-like than by giving back," said Guzman. It is Agape Volunteer Coordinator Lori Humber's job to connect the tattoo artists with needy Memphians.

"The majority of the families that are blessed or benefit from Jay's toy drive are families that are dealing with coming out of homelessness or are involved in the last-ditch effort to prevent homelessness," Humber said.

Last year was "sort of a trial year to see how it went," said Humber. Agape expected around 150 toys, but received more than 500. "We are so tired by the time that those three days are up," said Guzman. "But then when you drop the toys off and see the expressions on the kids' faces and the relief on the parents' faces, it's well worth it."

Agape executive director David Jordan calls House of Ink "a great match for us.""We have never had one entity ... bring that many presents," he said. "It was far beyond what any group has ever done."

Carey says he's most grateful for the people who don't get tattoos in exchange for their toys. "Oddly enough, those are the best gifts that we get," said Carey. "From people who don't even want anything. They just come to support."

This year, in addition to aiming for $10,000 worth of toys, Guzman said there's an initiative to get more gifts for older children and teenagers in need. "This (participating in Toys for Tattoos) is a great toe in the water for a lot of folks," said Jordan. "And if someone says, 'I want to do more,' then we will walk with them in terms of what else you might be into. Might you be a tutor, might you be a mentor, might you adopt a family ... there's lots of other things you can do."

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Eagles fan shows team spirit with 42 tattoos

Posted in : Tattoos, Videos

(added few months ago!)

When the Eagles hit the field, they'll have the support of quite a unique fan. Chuck Solomon traveled from Clifton Heights in Delaware County to Miami for Sunday's big game. Travelling hundreds of miles to support his favorite team is just a drop in the bucket.

Solomon takes the term "die-hard fan" to the next level. He has 42 tattoos and signatures from Eagles players past and present. He told Action News' Keith Russell that he has players represented from every era in the team's history. Looking to the add to his tattoo collection, Solomon says if the Eagles win a Superbowl that he'll turn his entire head into a tattoo depicting the Eagles helmet.

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Don't doubt Tebow; you might end up with an absurd tattoo

Posted in : Gossips, Tattoos

(added few months ago!)

Don't doubt Tebow; you might end up with an absurd tattooOne day, shortly after Tim Tebow became the Broncos' starting quarterback, the guys at Love n Hate Elite Tattoo Studio in Denver were having a therapeutic venting session. Most of them expressed their support for Brady Quinn over Tebow, but not Josh Lucero. The 22-year-old tattoo artist was the only one sticking up for Tebow, which led to a pretty high-stakes bet with one of the shop's regulars, Juan Contreras.

If Tebow won five games, then Contreras would have to get a "Tebow Time" tattoo. If Tebow failed, then Lucero would have "Te-(expletive)" tattooed on him. Well, here we are, seven starts later, and Tebow is 6-1.

And as it turns out, Contreras now has a ridiculous-looking centaur wearing a Broncos helmet forever etched into his thigh, with the words "Tebow Time" next to it. It's ugly, and it's intentional.

"This is probably the best bet I could've ever won, because now he looks like a dumbass to everybody, " Lucero said Thursday in a phone interview. " ... It's meant to look (expletive). I'm not giving him a tattoo that's good. He lost the bet."

Originally, Lucero's idea was a clock with Tebow standing in the middle with his arms as the clock's hands. Then, he thought about a tattoo of Tebow "Tebowing" but with a bronco's hoof as an arm. That ultimately led to the Old Spice commercial-inspired centaur look. It goes without saying that Contreras was in bad shape any which way.


The one drawback for Lucero is that, of the 2,000 or so tattoos he's inked by his estimation, this hideous design is the one that has earned him national recognition. "It's funny. I can do these amazing pieces, even an amazing Tebow drawing and post it on a forum, and there's a little bit of response," Lucero said. "But then I tattoo something this ugly and stupid, and now it's everywhere."

As for Lucero's message to all the Tebow haters?

"I love the Broncos, and I love what Tebow brings to the game," he said. "Even though he sucks at throwing, but I just like that he's passionate about the game. That's like my favorite part about him. You could say he sucks all you want, but he wins. There's not really much you can say after so many wins."

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Science of the tattoo-obsessed

Posted in : Gossips, Tattoos

(added few months ago!)

Science of the tattoo-obsessedScientists are nerds. They are passionate about something most people can’t care about, dig deeper into it than most people have patience for, and are easily bored by subjects they are not obsessed with. Nerds can be fun, in the way that autoclave spaghetti and midnight races with experimental sea slugs are fun. But what nerds aren’t, therefore, is cool.

Tattoos are cool. It hurts to get one, they evoke sailors and bikers and punks and other naughty people. And damn, man, that thing’s permanent, what are you going to tell your mom, and how the hell do you think you’re going to get a job? The problem with tattoos is that most of them suck. They are done by slacker punk kids with no talent, they are flash designs of butterflies or hearts or anchors or swallows. Employing my favorite technique of rectally deriving my statistics, fully 90% of tattoos are clichés, and 90% of those are badly placed and badly executed. And with them, the wearer usually proclaims, “I’m part of a group!” Historically, most ink signifies membership in some (usually seedy) club.

One of the all-time great Reese’s Peanut Butter Cup moments in recent cultural history, therefore, is the advent of science tattoos. Nerdy tattoos. Unique images chosen out of passion for one’s calling, designed lovingly late at night over strong coffee and weak beer, collaboratively modeled to sculpt the body region best suited to it, meticulously needled by artisanal craftsmen charging upward of $200 an hour, and worn proudly as a badge of individuality rather than uniformity. (Tattoo aficionadoes are chagrined, and sometimes furious, when they see “their” image on someone else.) Beautiful, sexy tattoos that you can wake up in the morning, stone sober, and look at in the mirror and be glad you got. And do the same 40 years later.

Me, I have a fish on my back. Brachyhypopomus pinnicaudatus, to be both generic and specific. I discovered it in Venezuela in 1987, during a long and traumatic field season. I wrote the paper describing the new species, I wrote a Master’s thesis on it, and I drew the illustration that accompanied the type specimen. It was a painful experience in many ways. That fish came to symbolize both achievement and failure, as well as my first attempt at synthesizing art and science. I carried that experience for 20 years, until I figured out ways to overcome the guilt, shame, and emotional scarring of those first years in grad school. And so I brought my original drawing to the best tattoo artist I could find, Tom Beasley at Dragon Moon Tattoo, and had him ink it on me. Its electric organ discharge, as visualized on an oscilloscope, plays above it on my neck. This body ornament took about 4 hours and cost $600. While Tom’s needles played over my dorsal tissues, I meditated on that experience. As he worked, I felt the weight lifting. Tom lifted that fish off my back, actually.

That, and my other tattoos, are why I pre-ordered Carl Zimmer’s lavish new book, Science ink: tattoos of the science-obsessed. Though bereft of tattoos himself, Zimmer has remarkable empathy for the inked. He gets why we do this. On his blog he collected stories and photographs of science-related tattoos. Zimmer, who writes for Discover magazine, presents the images along with explanations of the science and symbolism behind them. It’s a trove of science knowledge broken appealingly into Reese’s Pieces-sized chunks, and a big bag of eye candy for ink fetishists. These are tattoos that don’t suck.

Zimmer groups the images by discipline: physics, chemistry, natural history, neuroscience, and so on. The tattoos range from dainty anklets to dramatic full backpieces and sleeves. Zimmer is at his best when he walks us through a large, complicated tattoo with many elements. He describes an “ecological allegory” adorning the hip, side, and back of Maureen Drinkard, who wrote her PhD thesis on the bogs of Ohio. He tells us about the bog ecosystem, then describes the cardinal flower on her ribcage, the skunk cabbage that blooms beneath on her hip, the dragonfly she chose as a reminder to be strong and ferocious, and rat-tailed maggot she considers her future. The “ick” reaction some might have to the unromantic rat-tailed maggot is tempered by the “rainbow sheen” it gives off when plucked from the slimy bog and held in the sunlight. Science tattoos are almost always ultimately about beauty.

They are also about facts, which makes these images a playground for a science writer. “Six hundred million years ago,” Zimmer writes about Anthony Pirulli’s full “evo-devo” sleeve,

“a worm-like creature swimming the Precambrian seas used networks of genes to build its body—networks for determining its head-to-tail anatomy, its front-to-back coordinates, its appendages, its organs. That early worm gave rise to many lineages of new kinds of animals, which are still thriving today. And despite their diversity—from insects to squid to starfish to humans—they still use the same basic gene networks to build their bodies. These networks took on new functions through the evolution of the genetic switches that turned the genes on and off. So in a very deep sense, the heart of a fly is much like our own heart. Ever since, Firulli has been studying the functions of some of those genes.”

That’s nice writing. It captures the current understanding of systems biology and embeds it in its evolutionary context, without relying on technical jargon or the dry scientific passive voice. Zimmer gets the science right and expresses it in language a bar-brawling biker can understand.

The book is richly, even extravagantly produced. Though the pages are matte, the photos are mostly high-quality. The cover is in two colors of cloth and has molecular cut-outs, through which neurons, DNA, and microbes peek out. I’m not crazy about the gothic type on the headers, which, I suppose, is meant to evoke 19thcentury German scientific papers. It seems a bit over the top. The text is carefully edited, although in one case a bird is re-classified as a mammal when the South American motmot is listed as a “marmot.” The index is brief but effective; it thoughtfully includes the illustrated organisms and mathematical variables, as well as the names of the doctoral canvases that bear the imagery. Nerds can look up their friends, whether they be researchers or the researched.

I was simultaneously proud and a little dismayed that my other science-related tattoo (so far) merits an entry. Phi, the so-called “golden ratio,” is the first irrational number; a constant that, like the more familiar pi (3.1416…), can be carried out to an infinite number of decimal places and thus must always be approximated, its precision foiled by that tantalizing ellipsis. The golden ratio occurs frequently in nature, from the spiral of the chambered nautilus to the whorls of pine cones, sunflowers, and spiral galaxies. Fortunately, none of the four phi tattoos Zimmer presents are just like mine—or as beautiful, in my view. My tattoo has several layers of meaning for me, because I am a nerd, but one of them is as a reminder that mathematics, often called the language of nature, has limitations.

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