Blog Archive
-
▼
2008
(222)
-
▼
September
(31)
- Rachel's Roses
- The Virgin Mary Will Be Saved
- Vaj Shares His Interpretation of the Creative Process
- Josh Slices Up a Sturgeon on His Culinary Sleeve
- Dylan's Tattoo Dances on Her Ankle
- News Link: Tattoos Gain Even More Visibility
- Christopher's Ink Bridges Generations
- Buddy's Advice about Neck Tattoos
- First Day of Autumn Tattoo Blues
- A Series of Nautical Stars Guide Me to an Amazing ...
- Sal Shares His Illusion-ary Tattoo
- Melissa's Biblical Footnote
- Jackie Wears Words of Wisdom
- A Portrait of Marilyn
- A Grandmother's Vision, Inked in China
- A Spider from Across the Sea
- Introducing Nina's Ink, Part 1
- Rob's Rite of Passage
- Paul's 9/11 Memorial
- A Patriotic Tattoo for Patriot Day
- Repost for Patriot Day: Mike's Tribal 9/11 Tribute
- Mercedes Honors Family Members with her Ink
- Tattoosday Celebrates Its First Bloggiversary!
- Mike Remembers Mom with a Traditional Tattoo
- James and His Tree of Life
- Michelle's Amazing Owl Tattoo Honors Her Dad
- A Butterfly Journeys with Gillian
- A Butterfly Koi Rising on the Arm of Belquis
- Verrazano Redux
- Michael's Taurus Tattoo
- Alexa's Blue Bird Honors Her Grandfather's Memory
-
▼
September
(31)
Tuesday, September 16, 2008
A Grandmother's Vision, Inked in China
Last winter, the cold weather drove me inside, into the nearby Manhattan Mall food court, when I had time at lunch to go inkspotting. The food court has since closed and the mall is undergoing a massive J.C.Pennification, rendering it near useless for people-watching. I bring this up in the
waning days of summer, as last week I had some lunch time to spare and it was raining.
So I plodded off into nearby Penn Station to see if any commuters were in the ink-sharing mood. Near the Amtrak portion of the subterranean hub, I spotted the tattoo above and approached its owner to see what it was all about.
Eva, to whom this piece belongs, explained that it is a variation on the symbol for infinity. The arrows pointing off it represent directions moving off of the symbol.
The design originated, according to Eva, in a vision that her grandmother had. Her grandmother was a fortune-teller and the significance of the symbol carried great weight in her family.
Eva had this inked about two years ago, while visiting China. The tattoo was done by a local artist in Xinjiang Province.
Thanks to Eva for sharing this cool tattoo with us here at Tattoosday!
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comments:
Post a Comment