Tuesday 30 July 2013

Memorial Tattoo Quotes

Memorial Tattoo Quotes Biography
Source(Google.com.pk)

Memorial When I lost a very dear friend of mine at the unfathomably young age of twenty-six, I started thinking about getting a tattoo to honor her memory. Just after her funeral, when I was still reeling over the sudden shock of her untimely passing, I came across a sheet of loose leaf paper stuffed absentmindedly in a random notebook. It must have been from the summer we were fifteen, and vacationing with her family in North Carolina. It was a page she had copied down from the 1970's bestseller Jonathan Livingston Seagull and it quoted, in her own handwriting, "You have the freedom to be yourself--your true self--here and now, and nothing can stand in your way." I thought how great it would be to replicate that in tattoo form, though I never ended up doing it.Then, after my grandmother died from breast cancer, I found a journal she started writing in when she was first diagnosed. There are only a handful of entries, the last one dated about a month before her liver started failing and she lost her ability to write. The last sentence says: "Earth has no sorrow that heaven cannot heal." Two years after she passed, I got that quote tattooed on my forearm--in her handwriting.Getting these tattoos in my loved one's own handwriting may not make sense or have any real meaning to anyone except me, but I hold them extremely dear to my heart. Other memorial tattoos are a lot more obvious than this idea of mine. And in my research, I've noticed that they can be grouped into several general categories.words go, the word “tattoo” is a fairly recent addition to the English language, its use being documented for the first time in 1769 in Captain James Cook‘s diary. The word was derived from the Polynesian language. History has it that English speaking sailors got their first tattoos while on the Polynesian islands, and then introduced and popularized the custom in Europe.A tattoo is a mark made by inserting pigment into the skin; in technical terms, tattooing is dermal pigmentation. Tattoos may be made on human or animal skin. Tattoos on humans are a type of body modification or decoration, while tattoos on animals are primarily used for identification, as in branding.Permanent makeup is a cosmetic technique which employs tattoos (permanent pigmentation of the dermis) as a means of producing designs that resemble makeup, such as eye lining (eye shadows) and other permanent enhancing colors to the skin of the face, lips and eyelids. It is also used to produce artificial eyebrows, particularly in people who have lost  their eyebrow hair as a consequence of old age, disease, such as alopecia, chemotherapy or a genetic disturbance. Paramedical is the term used to describe the process of disguising scars and white spots in the skin such as in vitiligo. It is also used to restore or enhance the breast’s areola, after breast surgery or reconstruction due to mastectomy.
Tattooing is an ancient and highly artistic occupation that has achieved professional standing within the scientific, cosmetology, liberal arts, health care, and medical communities. Micro pigmentation is a specialty within tattoo that requires specific specialized education and training. Artistic and technical skill combined with extreme attention to tiny detail determines the final look of the inserted pigment. Other names describing related processes include derma pigmentation, micro pigmentation, permanent cosmetics and cosmetic tattooing.Micro pigmentation, tattoos and/or body art have been performed for millennia. Archaeological evidence indicates that tattooing was practiced among people in the late Stone Age, about 3300 B.C. These markings are the earliest known evidence of tattoos. More widely recognized are tattoos that were found on Egyptian and Nubian mummies dating from about 2000 B.C. Evidence of tattooing has also been found in China some 1000 years before Christ. The Incas, Mayans, Aztecs, Greeks and Egyptians are also among the cultures to use tattooing more than 2000 years ago. To create beauty, and to designate status or prestige were among cultural reasons that people have marked their bodies, both past and present.Creating Permanent Cosmetics, known professionally as Micropigmentation, is the micro-implantation (depositing) of pigment into the dermal layer of the skin, in essence, it is a cosmetic tattoo. Examples of what can be done using micro-pigmentation:Micropigmentation used to enhance and accentuate eyebrows, eyes and lips. Permanent make-up is waterproof, does not wash off or smear. Lips can be made to look fuller, eyebrows can be even and symmetrical. Eyes can be lined to add definition and enhancement. Time can be saved by removing the chores of applying liner to lips, eyes or brows from your daily routineReconstructing and Camouflage:Micropigmentation can be used to camouflage scars and areola’s, burns and vitiligo, to a degree, using flesh tone pigment. Areolas can be reconstructed to look natural after undergoing breast augmentation.

Memorial Tattoo Quotes
Memorial Tattoo Quotes
Memorial Tattoo Quotes
Memorial Tattoo Quotes
Memorial Tattoo Quotes
Memorial Tattoo Quotes
Memorial Tattoo Quotes
Memorial Tattoo Quotes
Memorial Tattoo Quotes
Memorial Tattoo Quotes
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