2 minute read

MY FIRST TIME

Next Article
THE TO-DO LIST

THE TO-DO LIST

PEOPLE

Bob Fulwider

Tattoos should be earned, says artist from House of Ink in Leesburg.

INTERVIEWER: VICTORIA SCHLABIG ≈ PHOTO: NICOLE HAMEL

hen I got my fi rst tattoo, I was 18 years old. I walked in, picked one (a cross and rose) off the wall and that was it. Now I have over 25. Not all of them are meaningful, but I won’t let just anybody tattoo me. I have to want to have you as part of my life, and I could tell you right off the bat who did every tattoo I’ve got. My favorite style is cartoon stuff , comic book characters. But my favorite tattoos are always ones that are personal to the people. Tattooing itself is really personal, it’s really intimate. Your kid draws you a cute little picture, I love doing those. They’re not exactly aesthetically beautiful, but the meaning behind it is super-cool.

I tell people, don’t be so impulsive. You know, it’s forever, it’s not like a marriage where if you don’t like it in six months, you can get rid of it. Unfortunately, when we’re young, we make mistakes. We pick a bad tattoo, or we let our friend who works out of their house tattoo us. You grow from that. We don’t like the same things we liked when we were 18 when we’re in our 40s. Our lifestyle changed.

When I fi rst started out, most shops were still biker-run. Now, any preppy kid with some money opens up a tattoo shop. You’ve got so many snowfl akes nowadays: “Can’t you numb the skin fi rst?” And, I mean, I could. I’m not going to do it, though.

I feel tattoos should be earned. With life comes pain, with your tattoo comes a little pain, especially if it’s a memorial tattoo. Say you lost your son and you’re getting this tattoo for your son. It’s going to hurt, whether I know it or not, because that pain is still in you. I can’t take that away.

What about your fi rst time? If you’d like to share a story about a significant “first,” email victoria@akersmediagroup.com.

This article is from: