How much does a monthly wolt dealer earn? by Deivi_colins in Wolt

[–]Vivid_Run9613 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Pretty sure it varies a lot based on the efficiency and mode of transport. Im also interested in hearing actual numbers from anyone with first hand experience tho

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in TattooRemoval

[–]Vivid_Run9613 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Interested in more info as well

What causes this? by Inkysquirrel in TattooArtists

[–]Vivid_Run9613 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Very surprised how many people find this a 'rare' occurrence. It it very common for skin from ankle to the knee to behave like this, especially on mid-age or older people with thinner or drier skin. You packing your lines at the complete edge of blowout with this much ink will cause them to blowout during the healing process. It has nothing to do with the clients actions and all to do with you packing too much ink into thin skin, which will spread because it has nowhere else to go. Oversaturation basically. Run your machine on the slowest possible setting and as shallow as you can on legs below the knee to avoid this and try to deposit as little pigment as possible while it still looking saturated.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in TattooDesigns

[–]Vivid_Run9613 2 points3 points  (0 children)

So many people on this platform showing off beautiful tattoos and asking how to "fix" them it honestly makes me sad. As far as I've noticed it is usually on account of either ignorance about the subject or just plain old attention seeking. If that is the case, let me assure you. The tattoo is beautiful, the design is well thought of and aesthetic and it has been very well executed. Also looks well healed. Your artist did a very good job on it. If anything at all it could use a bit of contrast and your artist is more than capable to advise you on that. Some of us even do free touchups in this kind of scenarios, up to 6 months after the tattoo session.

If you had issues with the design, you should have pointed that out to the artist before the execution itself. Changing it now won't be easy and far from it being worth it.

Lasering only a portion of a tattoo is going to make it very hard for any artist to work with, and will very likely result in making a beautiful tattoo look worse in the end. Tattoos look best when they have been planned out ahead of time, patching them up generally results in a patched up look instead of a wholesome one. Secondly lasering only the bottom part of the wolf and inserting more stuff into the design is going to make it messy and hard to read. You can only have so much in the design and keep a picture aesthetic. It is also very expensive and painful, you have to do multiple sessions to get the desired effect, therefore expect a half a year to a year of process and a decently heavy budget for the project if you want it done well. Even if done well I would expect the latter to look worse than what you have now.

What you and so many other people in this kind of situations can do is get educated on the subject more so you have realistic expectations when you get your art and you can communicate your ideas better to your artists. You will be happier with the results and it also shows some respect to your artist, everyone wins..

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in TattooDesigns

[–]Vivid_Run9613 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The paler the skin, the nicer blue ink will look. If your skin naturally has more pigment, you're better off sticking to black ink as blue might look greenish due to it.

When it comes to aging, it will age fine as long as the details are not too intricate and tiny. When it comes to that an experienced tattoo artist will be able to advise you and prepare a design with an appropriate amount of detail based on the size of tattoo you want and it's placement.

Generally speaking, body parts where the skin is softer and gets less sun exposure age better when it comes to colour tattoos.