Monday 30 September 2013

Hand Tattoo Pics For Girls For Women Tumble Words Quotes For Men Design Designs Writing

Hand Tattoo Pics Biography

Source:- Google.com.pk


Ethnographically, tattooing was practiced by all Eskimos and was most common among women. While there are a multitude of localized references to tattooing practices in the Arctic, the first was probably recorded by Sir Martin Frobisher in 1576. Frobisher's account describes the Eskimos he encountered in the bay that now bears his name:

"The women are marked on the face with blewe streekes down the cheekes and round about the eies...Also, some of their women race [scratch or pierce] their faces proportionally, as chinne, cheekes, and forehead, and the wristes of their hands, whereupon they lay a colour, which continueth dark azurine."

As a general rule, expert tattoo artists were respected elderly women. Their extensive training as skin seamstresses (parkas, pants, boots, boat covers, etc.) facilitated the need for precision when "stitching the human skin" with tattoos. Tattoo designs were usually made freehand but in some instances a rough outline was first sketched upon the area of application. A typical 19th century account provided by William Gilder illustrates the tattooing process among the Central Eskimo living near Daly Bay, a branch of the great Hudson Bay:

Central Canadian Inuit tattoos, late 19th century"The wife has her face tattooed with lamp-black and is regarded as a matron in society. The method of tattooing is to pass a needle under the skin, and as soon as it is withdrawn its course is followed by a thin piece of pine stick dipped in oil and rubbed in the soot from the bottom of a kettle. The forehead is decorated with a letter V in double lines, the angle very acute, passing down between the eyes almost to the bridge of the nose, and sloping gracefully to the right and left before reaching the roots of the hair. Each cheek is adorned with an egg-shaped pattern, commencing near the wing of the nose and sloping upward toward the corner of the eye; these lines are also double. The most ornamented part, however, is the chin, which receives a gridiron pattern; the lines double from the edge of the lower lip, and reaching to the throat toward the corners of the mouth, sloping outward to the angle of the lower jaw. This is all that is required by custom, but some of the belles do not stop here. Their hands, arms, legs, feet, and in fact their whole bodies are covered with blue tracery that would throw Captain Constantinus completely in the shade."

Around Bering Strait, the tattooing method reveals continuity in application, as observed by Gilder, yet the pigments employed were more varied. According to the Alaskan archaeologist Otto W. Geist, the St. Lawrence Island Yupiget tattoo artist drew a string of sinew thread through the eye of a steel or bone needle. The thread was then thoroughly soaked in a liquid pigment of lampblack, urine, and graphite. The needle and sinew were drawn through the skin: as the needle was inserted and pushed just under the epidermis about a thirty-second of an inch. These typical tattoo "operations" required several sittings with the tattoo artist. The results were often accompanied by great pain, swelling, and in some cases, infection and even death.

Hand Tattoo Pics For Girls For Women Tumble Words Quotes For Men Design Designs Writing
Hand Tattoo Pics For Girls For Women Tumble Words Quotes For Men Design Designs Writing
Hand Tattoo Pics For Girls For Women Tumble Words Quotes For Men Design Designs Writing
Hand Tattoo Pics For Girls For Women Tumble Words Quotes For Men Design Designs Writing
Hand Tattoo Pics For Girls For Women Tumble Words Quotes For Men Design Designs Writing
Hand Tattoo Pics For Girls For Women Tumble Words Quotes For Men Design Designs Writing
Hand Tattoo Pics For Girls For Women Tumble Words Quotes For Men Design Designs Writing
Hand Tattoo Pics For Girls For Women Tumble Words Quotes For Men Design Designs Writing
Hand Tattoo Pics For Girls For Women Tumble Words Quotes For Men Design Designs Writing
Hand Tattoo Pics For Girls For Women Tumble Words Quotes For Men Design Designs Writing
Hand Tattoo Pics For Girls For Women Tumble Words Quotes For Men Design Designs Writing

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