Posts Tagged ‘celebrities’

The Tebowing Debate

Sunday, April 29th, 2012

I believe it’s strange for the nation, even those who don’t know anything of Tim Tebow’s sport generally, are inventing a nationwide excitement about the religious and spiritual rituals of the man.

“It’s name is Tebowing and is described as the action of simply kneeling on your own knee having a hand for your bowing head for just a moment of silence or prayer. A variety of people just think Tebowing is often a fun thing to do and take pictures of themselves doing it in many places.

There are many of who don’t like Tebow or “Tebowing” normally. They’re saying saying thanks to a Almighty figure for something good happening for their team, a blessing as it were, is in some manner unfounded plus a religious slap of some type with other religions.

Others are coming up with Tebowing sites and also sites all just containing Tebowing Quotes.

Precisely what is bewildering to me is that Tim Tebow is not the first football player to show his gratitude to God or even expression such belief in the same way, Brady Quinn for instance points to the sky whenever he has a throws a TD pass… so why then so much craziness surrounding Tim Tebow? Does Football carry more weight than other sports when it comes to the Almighty?

Sports, have traditionally been an integral part of American’s everyday life when it comes to exemplifying morals, strong play and just plain ole American toughness, as a result it seems only appropriate this debate arose in sports, and could only increase as America graduates from the sport of football to basketball, which begins immediately after the football season.

Possibly, inside a game that defines itself by violent collisions, the guy is grateful no one was hurt during a play he called. Possibly Tebow himself is attempting to remember to get some milk and some eggs on the way home following the game. The point is no one can be sure what he’s really doing or if he’s even praying at all.

Some might question my opinion since my experience, has nothing to do with religion or football, why I’m discussing this matter if there is no personal stake in? My answer to that particular question is “It is my belief every authority figure, no matter the sport, is accountable to teach their players good morals and ethics.”

I’m not implying a authority figures should begin a meetings with prayer, or make an effort to press his spiritual beliefs onto the group, as I feel that would be wrong and might generate a controversy. Nevertheless, I firmly believe the values of good morals ought to be emphasized through the at all times. Hopefully that doesn’t sound like I contradicted my previous statement.

The values I discussing are, fairness and honesty, no lying or cheating, handling your everyone with respect and always giving your best are some of the ideals I talk about. I believe anyone in a position of authority has a moral responsibility to shape our kids into good adults with substantial character.

To get the information on Tebowing and Tebowing Pictures Please visit at tebowing.ws

Cubic Zirconia Jewelry

Wednesday, April 18th, 2012

Diamonds have been in use for jewelry for thousands of years. It is judged that they were first used and actively mined 3,000 years ago in India, but there is also evidence that it was used there about 6,000 years ago. In those days it was almost impossible to cut or polish the diamonds.

The recognition of diamonds as jewelry really rose in the Eighteenth Century, at which time more ‘contemporary’ techniques allowed the acts of cutting and polishing to be done more easily. Successful advertising ploys helped make diamonds more desirable to the general population.

Cartels of diamond miners and sellers such as De Beers restricted the supply of diamonds which has successfully held the price unnaturally high for decades. An instance of extremely successful promotion is Argyle or brown diamonds in Australia

Brown diamonds were thought to be useless for jewelry because of their dirty colour. However, one mine in Australia produces 7,000 kg of brown diamonds a year, so began a campaign to make them desirable. These days, they can be worn as jewelry in Australia and sell well.

Because of the high price of diamonds and the restricted supply, jewelers have sought a man-manufactured, cheaper alternative. Cubic Zirconia is one of the best synthetic diamond-like materials that they have come up with so far.

Some people would rather purchase cubic zirconia than real diamonds because they do not like to be manipulated and ultimately cheated by the diamond companies. Surveys suggest that numerous diamonds have been ‘altered’ to increase their apparent value and that much too many diamonds are too highly priced.

Some others are shying away from diamonds for factors of conscience. ‘Blood Diamonds’ and forced child labour have hit the headlines. The conditions in these forced labour camps is horrendous and was truthfully depicted in the film ‘Blood Diamond’ with Leonardo DiCaprio.

Cubic zirconia is a very decent copy of diamonds and is difficult to distinguish from the real thing without specialist tools and a thorough knowledge of gemstones. Many well-known rich people are refusing to wear diamonds, not because they cannot afford them, but because of their above associations.

There are several other options to cubic zirconia including moissanite and nexus, but cubic zirconia is the firm favourite. Russian cubic zirconia is among the principal forms of the ‘gemstone’.

It is worth stating here that cubic zirconia does not exist in nature, although its raw form zircon (zirconium silicate) and zirconium dioxide does. Russian cubic zirconia is made to the specifications set down by the Gemological Institute of America.

If you are content to wear cubic zirconia, you will be treading the green path in jewelry and saving lots of money as well. Cubic zirconia is approximately 25% of the cost of diamonds, so you can afford to spend more on the setting rather than on the stone. Cubic zirconia looks fantastic in a solid platinum or pure gold mounting.

Owen Jones, the writer of this piece, writes on a number of topics, but is now involved with Amber in Poland. If you would like to know more, please visit our web site at Jewellry but Watches.

Horse Jewelry

Tuesday, April 17th, 2012

Horse lovers and riding aficionados often like to demonstrate their affection for the animals and their hobby. There are a number of methods of doing this. Children might decorate their bedrooms with wallpaper with horses on it or wear badges.

I saw a car a while ago with the registration plate “HOR5E” and I have seen men wearing rings with a design of a horse running inlaid into the stone in gold. Women frequently wear brooches of a similar design or only the head of a horse.

Equestrian jewellery is stylish and also timeless enough to be worn on any occasion. A beautiful horse’s head drawn in tiny diamonds makes a stunning brooch, but so does one fashioned from gold or silver. In fact, numerous jewellers are realizing the popularity of equestrian jewellery.

Although the horse’s head brooch is almost certainly the most traditional piece of equestrian jewellery, pendants are also well-liked these days. The jeweller can craft a larger piece when it is suspended about the neck than if it is pinned to the hair or clothing.

You may not have seen the type of jewellery that I am describing, but I bet that you have seen the Lucky Horse Shoe displayed somewhere. The Lucky Horse Shoe is only another aspect of equestrian jewellery. Many women like to wear them around their necks or on a Charm Bracelet.

The most well-known symbol of a horse is almost certainly the Ferrari logo. The Ferrari logo of a rearing horse not just adorns their cars, but may also be seen on official Ferrari memorabilia such as Ferrari jewellery, Ferrari watches and Ferrari shirts and jumpers.

However, equestrian jewellery does not just come in the shape of the horses themselves. The accoutrements to riding are also often represented in jewellery. Men frequently use cuff links in the form of tiny stirrups and women frequently wear silver or gold riding boots on their Lucky Charm bracelets.

Besides the above-mentioned equestrian lucky charms, I have also observed horse buckets, saddles and hunting horns on ladies’ charm bracelets or as single charms suspended from the ears or about the neck. They can also be worn as larger articles as brooches.

Much of this type of jewellery is intended for the more well-to-do horsey set and for girls as they go through their horse-loving phase. Therefore, the articles are made in two distinct types: costly and the not so costly – otherwise very few girls would get the opportunity to show their affection for their large four-legged friends.

The last group of people that can often be seen wearing equestrian jewellery is the gambler who likes to follow horse racing. This is normally a man, but definitely not always.

These men will often wear pins of some form depicting an aspect of their love of the sport and the animals. They may also think of them as lucky charms too.

Owen Jones, the writer of this piece, writes on a variety of topics, and is now concerned with Good Diamond Quality. If you would like to know more, please visit our web site at Jewellry and Watches.

Turquoise Jewelry

Tuesday, April 17th, 2012

Blue and green are two of the most popular colours among people and with nature – the sea, water, the sky and plants are all green or blue or turquoise, a greeny-blue. Turquoise is the colour of the open sea. It is not a difficult colour to like and it matches with most colour schemes.

Turquoise is not a especially rare gemstone, but it is rare in its finest state. It is mined in numerous countries including the USA, Iran, India and China. The name turquoise comes from an old French word for Turkey or Turkish, because it was first brought into Europe from Iranian or Persian mines via Turkey.

Turquoise is easily smashed and is only slightly stronger than glass, having a hardness of 6. Turquoise is one of the oldest mined gemstones and still, most of the world’s mines are small and hand-operated.

Some of the Persian mines are 2,000 years old and still being worked. However, the oldest mines are on the Sinai Peninsular and they are known to be at least 3,000 years old as they were used in the times of the pharaohs.

The colour varies through greens and blues because of the existence or minerals. If there is more copper present the stone will be bluer and if there is aluminium or iron, it will be greener.

Iranian turquoise is among the best quality in the world and is used predominantly in the jewelery industry. Turquoise from some other locations, like the south-western states of America, is of inferior grade and is too chalky and powdery for this use.

Regrettably, chemists have discovered ways to enhance this gemstone, so that unless you are an expert or buying from a reliable source, you could easily end up purchasing poor grade turquoise that has been treated. This is the case with other gemstones too.

Some of the tricks that they use are:

Chemicals can be used to intensify the natural colour of the gem

Resin can be soaked into the pores of porous, friable, low-grade turquoise to ‘stabilize’ it – ie prevent it flaking and crumbling.

Totally untreated, natural turquoise of pleasant appearance is very rare and so very expensive. It would be very hard to impossible for a layman to identify whether a stone has been treated or not, but you are unlikely ever to come across any.

Whatever, grade of turquoise you have, you will have to take care of it because it is quite soft, easily scratched and quite easily crushed to powder.

Therefore, do not leave it to rattle around in your bag and store it wrapped on its own in a cool, dark place. Extremes of temperature might harm it as well. Turquoise is naturally porous, even if it has been drenched in resin, so do not allow oils or perfumes to soak into it.

If you have to wash a turquoise, you will need nothing but a soft fabric and warm, but not hot, water. Dry the stone right away after washing with a second soft duster. Be careful not to score the surface with the dirt that you are cleaning off.

Owen Jones, the writer of this piece, writes on a variety of topics, but is now concerned with Baby Birthstones. If you would like to know more, please visit our web site at Jewellry but Watches.

The Most Precious Gems

Monday, April 16th, 2012

People like precious gemstones for different reasons. Some store wealth in gems and precious metals, some wear then to display their wealth and their self-perceived status, some believe that wearing their birthstone will bring them health, wealth and happiness and others wear them because they look nice.

Valuable gemstones have always been sought after because of their value, but in older days, they were also prized for other reasons, such as being able to bestow good health. This belief persists among some peoples, but not a lot in the Developed World any more.

In the Developed World, most people wear precious stones for their beauty and to exhibit status. In the East, people also wear precious stones to display status, but collect them because they do not traditionally have faith in banks.

And who could blame them in the light of the Developed World’s recent experience with their financial banking crisis and the meteoric rise in the cost of gold? There is probably a lesson for us all here.

Anyway, apart from precious metals, there are precious stones and the most expensive of them are: emeralds, diamonds, rubies and sapphires. The order of the stones in value relies on the quality.

Diamonds of ordinary quality are worth more than emeralds of regular quality, but high quality emeralds are worth more than high quality diamonds, because it is hard to find emeralds without lots of faults, which are also known as ‘inclusions’.

Diamonds come in all kinds of colours from clear to ‘black’. Clear diamonds are what most people would want, but there are some very expensive big coloured diamonds in yellow and blue.

The problem with gemstones is that their supply is closely regulated by cartels and governments, which keeps their cost artificially high. Diamonds are the worst of the bunch in this regard.

De Beers controls a substantial proportion of the diamond market and was able to regulate prices for decades. The Argyle mine of Australia produces 7,000 kg of brown diamonds, which were by tradition considered worthless for the purposes of jewelry.

However, due to a clever marketing campaign, brown diamonds are now considered valuable in Australia, although clear diamonds are still preferred in the rest of the world.

Emeralds are a gorgeous green gemstone, but it is very hard to purchase a good one. Many emeralds have been doctored to look more valuable than they truly are, but this is true of diamonds as well.

If you like red gems, then a ruby is for you. Ruby is a description of the colour red and rubies can vary from blood red crimson to pink, but in general, the deeper the red the better. However, not all red stones that are sold as rubies are rubies, but you could have guessed that

Sapphire is normally a beautiful deep blue, but may also be pale blue to pink. Sapphires come mostly from the East, like Thailand, Russia but even North Carolina in the USA.

If you are going to purchase any of these top gemstones, purchase the best that you are able to afford, because you can pass them on to your children as an inheritance.

Owen Jones, the writer of this article, writes on a number of topics, and is now concerned with Good Diamond Quality. If you would like to know more, please visit our web site at Jewellry and Watches.

Emeralds – The Green Gemstones

Sunday, April 15th, 2012

The majority of women like jewellery, Many men do too, but they tend to prefer gadgets and watches. In many countries women store their wealth in jewellery as exemplified by the Fifties hit “Diamonds Are A Girl’s Best Friend”. Asian women in particular accumulate gold.

However, precious stones and precious metals are generally perceived to be very valuable. Leaving the value of the piece aside, most people have a favourite colour.

Some prefer yellow gold, others prefer white. Some like the clarity and brilliance of diamonds, whilst others prefer aquamarine, turquoise of green.

In fact, high-quality green gems are among the most expensive of all gemstones including diamonds. Emeralds are the most costly green gemstones weight for weight.

Gemstones are formed underground at great pressures and they get their colours from the minerals involved in their composition. Gemstones are generally fairly hard, because they were fashioned under great pressure.

In olden times, lots of people believed that gemstones had magical properties. The magical property ascribed to emerald was the restoration of sight and the curing of eye illnesses.

In fact, emeralds are a kind of beryl and get their green colour from the element chromium or occasionally vanadium. Emeralds have a hardness of seven to eight; diamonds are the hardest at 10 on the Mohs Scale.

However, emerald has a great number of inclusions (or faults), so it will shatter quite easily. These inclusions give emeralds their typical fuzzy look.Nevertheless, the best emeralds are those that have a clear, transparent, even colour of green all the way through.

Weight for weight, an emerald of the best quality is more valuable than a diamond of comparable quality, which amazes most people. However, decent diamonds are easier to find than decent emeralds and hence the disparity in price.

Become very suspicious of stones that are called ‘something’ emeralds like Lithia emeralds or oriental emeralds. These are usually cheaper gemstones which are referred to as emeralds in order to boost their value. These stones are not emeralds and not worth much in comparison.

Because of the cost of real emeralds, numerous ‘cheap emeralds’ are either not emeralds at all or are very bad specimens that are being held together by resin. It is very hard for a novice to know the difference between the decent and the bad, which makes it vital to buy from a reputable jeweller or dealer.

Emeralds have been well-liked since the days of the pharaohs and there are emerald mines in Egypt. There are also emerald mines in Siberia, Brazil, Zambia, Pakistan, South Africa, India and Australia amongst other places.

In spite of the fact that there seems to be numerous sources of emeralds, good quality gemstones are still hard to get hold of at a decent price. However, there are no equivalents to emerald, so if you like the best, you can expect to pay a lot for it.

As with all costly gemstones, you ought to get a signed certificate of weight and quality when you purchase an emerald.

Owen Jones, the writer of this piece, writes on a number of subjects, and is now concerned with Amber in Poland. If you would like to know more, please visit our website at Jewellry and Watches.

Is It About Dancing Or Playing The Judges?

Thursday, April 5th, 2012

Dancing with the Stars is all about dancing, isn’t it? After all, the programme is known as Dancing with the Stars. However, if you think about it, dancing is just one aspect of the performance. One thing that is crucial is impressing the judges faviourably, because what the judges say about a couple will have an effect on millions of viewers, many of whom will cast a vote in favour of one set of dancers or the other.

This obviously affects the fate of both couples, one will go home with long faces while the other will celebrate and possibly kick start a flailing career. It is difficult to impress millions of people but much easier to manipulate the three judges, who will then speak on your behalf and sway millions of viewers for you, because people listen to the opinion of experts even if they do not always agree with them.

So, how do you go about influencing the judges to have a favourable opinion |about you assuming of course that you are able to dance reasonably well or you would not be on the show in the first place?

Appearance is paramount, after dancing ability. The dancers have to look the part. That involves tight-fitting clothing for the men and skimpy, revealing garments for the women – no matter how old or overweight they are. Within reason naturally. Looking sexy never does any damage and two of the judges are men.

However, balancing that is the public perception that the third judge, the woman on Dancing with the Stars judging panel, has a reputation for over-criticizing the women. This might give younger men an advantage. So, stunning costumes are a card to be played, but it is not a high trump.

Elegance and poise are important and that means knowing the dance routines in your sleep. You need to have practiced so much that every step is automatic; the routines have to flow on from one another like water out of a jug.

A captivating smile is a big help.The contestants have to appear as if they are enjoying themselves even if they are agonizing inside. This should not be difficult to most of the contestants as most of them are stage performers like actors and singers anyway, but sports personalities do not have to smile in their professional lives, so it might come less easily to them.

There are several theories concerning whether the participants in Dancing with the Stars are judged equally, that is whether they are judged on their dancing skills alone or whether there is more to it than that.

Playing up to the judges can be pushed too far and sycophantism could be penalized. Having said that, smiling at the judges and being friendly should get you a few brownie points.

If you would like to join the debate on whether the dancers are judged solely on their dancing skills, go on over to the message boards on the official Dancing with the Stars web site.

Owen Jones, the author of this article writes on quite a number of topics, but is currently concerned with the host of Dancing with the the Stars. If you want to know more go to our web site at DWTS Pictures.

Can Natural Tattoo Removal Really Work?

Thursday, April 5th, 2012

Getting rid of a tattoo doesn’t always have to be a tedious experience, there are natural alternatives which cause no skin scarring, disease, hyperpigmentation or bleeding not like some other tattoo removal methods such as excision, dermabrasion, salabrasion or lasers.

For some reason, laser tattoo removal is always projected as the only option for getting rid of a tattoo even though it is agonizing, expensive and a cause of skin scarring.

How did our antecedents eradicate their tattoos before there were lasers?

The removal of tattoos is also as old as tattooing, but they are least famous and least explored. However, if natural tattoo removal procedures were made as popular as Q-switched laser tattoo removal, the doctors, tattoo removal centers, tattoo removal cream manufacturers could not make as much as money from you.

Besides they leave a trail of side effects. Did you know that many tattoo removal creams are only pure marketing hype and they may contain potentially harmful chemicals such as TCA (TriChloro Acetic Acid) and Hydroquinone.

They cause skin cancer and many injuries, not only to the skin but also to our internal organs (fumes from TCA irritate lungs). Even 5% TCA is not safe but these tattoo removal creams are frequently using as high as 50% concentrated TCA.

Tattooing is a means to express yourself and but if you want to remove a tattoo, you should not have to live with tattoos you regret.

You can use a combination of 12 natural products to remove your tattoo, they have no side effects, they are 100% natural, they cause no skin scarring and they are quite cheap. What is more, they work each and every time, no matter how dark the tattoos are, how old they are or what pigments were used.

Let’s get back to how tattoos are created in first place in order to better realise how natural products can remove them.

Contemporary electric tattoo guns create thousands of puncture wounds in the skin to inject tattoo pigment and form the tattoo. The ink particles are effectively trapped by a network of connective tissue in a type of cell called a Fibroblast. This is the connective tissue that creates fibers such as collagen.

This process results in harm to the epidermis and the dermis and they become blended together as a result of the mutilated layer that usually separates the two. The body responds by bleeding at the surface of the skin as a result of the ruptured capillaries.

The immune system responds by swelling to shut down the blood flow. The immune response cells then begin cleaning up by transmitting the ink through the lymph node closest to the tattoo site. At first the ink is dispersed in the upper area of the skin, but within 1 to 2 weeks it becomes more concentrated in a single region as new tissue starts to form around the ink and traps it in the dermal fibroblasts.

After about 30 days the two layers of skin have healed enough to trap the ink and within 90 days the tattoo ink is completely surrounded by connective tissue that holds the ink in place. Over time, usually several years, it will start to sink deeper into the dermis, or second layer of skin making removal even harder.

So the trick here is to increase the number of immune cells which will increase the chances of ink movement (setting free the trapped ink pigments) thereby accelerating the fading of the tattoo.

The natural products are able to create this apoptotic reaction which enables your own body’s immune system to break up the tattoo ink pigments which eventually are flushed out by lymphatic system.

Owen Jones, the writer of this piece writes on quite a number of subjects, but is currently involved with Men’s Tatoos. If you want to know more go to our web site at White Ink Tatoo.

What Takes Place When You Get Your Tattoo?

Saturday, March 31st, 2012

Despite the number of tattoos that one sees each day, most people have no notion what goes on in a tattoo salon. Many people think tattoos scary or exotic and painful.

However, social attitudes in Britain and America have changed more in favour of tattoos that it used to be. Some countries view tattoos much more favourably, whereas others even revile them.

Some people with a tattoo are completely unprepared for other people’s reactions to their tattoos. In fact, some individuals become quite upset because of other people’s reactions.

Others expect a little negativity and so have their tattoo put somewhere where they can conceal or reveal it as desired.

The upper arm, the lower leg, the chest and the back are common places for men, whereas women tend to have smaller tattoos on their shoulder, upper thigh or lower back.

Tattoos that are done in a salon are made with needles that pump or insert coloured ink below the skin where it will permanently dye the skin. Before the needle gun that is used nowadays, people may tattoo themselves or clients with a pin, a sewing needle, a sharp stick or a quill pen.

In those days – merely a few decades ago – tattoos were usually either blue or black, because tattooists used writers’ ink.

There was a higher chance of disease then, but tattoo artists are a lot better trained in health and safety nowadays and awareness of infection and disease in general is much higher too. Even many doctors and nurses did not completely understand how vital cleanliness was a hundred years ago.

If health care professionals did not understand hygiene, you can imagine what dockside tattoo studios were like. Some were so bad that local authorities and even countries banned tattooing altogether. In some parts of the world, cleanliness is still an issue, so a would-be tattooee should look for signs of hygiene or otherwise before consenting to the tattoo.

Numerous people take a design that they like to a tattoo artist, but others just choose one out of a catalogue in the tattoo salon. If you take your own design, look for one comparable to it in the catalogue to get an idea of cost.

Then show it to the tattooer for a valuation. The cost will depend on the colours used and how long it takes, Find out the tattooer’s hourly rate. it may even be written on a list on the wall.

When agreed, the tattooer will transfer the design to your skin whether by stencil or freehand. At that point, you can get an idea of what the tattoo will look like. This is your last opportunity to change your mind. A small tattoo of one or two colours may take 45-60 minutes.

Once it is complete you will be given tips for after care. You need to follow this advice or you might have problems that could put you in a GP’s surgery. Do not take too lightly this final phase.

Owen Jones, the writer of this article writes on lots of topics, but is at present involved with tatooed eyebrows. If you would like to know more go to our website at White Ink Tatoo.

Things To Know Concerning Tattoos

Saturday, March 24th, 2012

Tattoos are a sort of man-made scar, that ma be coloured at will. Ink is injected under the skin with a needle where it changes the natural pigmentation of the skin. In olden days, this might have been done with a sharpened feather or a splinter of wood; later, pins and needles were used. These days a tattoo artist makes use of something that is comparable to a road drill, but in miniature.

This tattoo gun has interchangeable needles (one per customer) and can inject ink at the rate of 2,000 pin pricks a minute. It makes a sound like a dentist’s drill. The needle punctures the skin to the required depth and leaves a small volume of ink.

The movement of the needle can be regulated by a small electric motor or it may come from a cord going around a pulley like an old Singer sewing machine, again, just like most dentists’ drills. Which type of machine the tattoo artist uses relies very far on his personal preferences or the device that he learned his trade with.

Disease and infection have always been the biggest problems when having a tattoo done and that was thousands of years before HIV-AIDS was ever heard of. Even a hundred years ago, an infection in a tattoo on the bicep might mean losing an arm which would have been disasterous for the prosperity of that man and all the members of his family. Being tattooed has always been very hazardous.

However, even with HIV-AIDS, being tattooed is almost certainly less risky now than it ever has been in history. This is for several factors:

1] tattoo artists and customers are a lot more aware of the dangers these days

2] tattoo artists require qualifications which means that they have been trained in health and safety awareness

3] tattooing is governed by the local government’s environmental health department in most countries

Therefore, if the client just carries out a few checks before using a tattoo studio, the risks of serious consequences are quite minimal. The first thought for most people is the quality of the tattoo and that is obviously very important, but the first consideration should be health and safety. Is the studio clean and is a new needle used for each customer and then thrown away?

Not only the needles have to be sterile and for one use only though. Anything that that needle touches after it has been below someone’s skin ought to be similarly sterile or infection might be passed through secondary equipment.

Pain is of secondary importance to most people who go for tattoos. Indeed, some say that it hurts like the devil and some claim that it does not hurt at all. The site of the tattoo and the customer’s personal pain limit play roles here.

However, one thing is sure, a tattoo is an open wound until it heals, so infection can take place after leaving the tattoo parlour as well. That is why it is vital to follow the health and safety advice of the tattooist after you leave his studio.

Owen Jones, the author of this piece writes on lots of subjects, but is currently concerned with the Barcode Tatoo. If you would like to know more go to our web site at White Ink Tatoo.