United States: Everyone needs a tattoo I think that I wanted tattoo for the first time when I was sixteen, but I wanted to pierce my ear and make my hair blue. Ok, I am 18 years old now, because my hair is already very red, my hair is very red, and my ears are not penetrated so my hair is very red , I finally got a tattoo. . To tell the truth, I also gave him a friend. I am trapped in two of them now, but I have no regrets anyway. The plan to get a tattoo is for me and my friend.
Tattoo For us Americans, the concept seems to be very simple and familiar; no matter which street in the city or the university street you walk, the nearby sidewalk is a tattoo shop. With the coming of the 21st century, the shame of a tattoo as a symbol of crime has disappeared at least in the United States. They are fairly common in the United States, but in other places where the US exists militarily, tattoos are often seen as more contradictory. In Okinawa in the southern part of Japan, tattoos were respected during the Kingdom of the Ryukyus (14th - 19th centuries), but after the Japanese empire annexed the kingdom in 1879, the tattoo became disgraceful. Since then, the sarcastic place is so big that the population of the United States not only looks down on tattoos and their owners, but also abandons the unique custom of Okinawa by mistake.
Hajiki is a traditional tattoo in the hands of a woman in the Ryukyus, a custom to lose to the world under the name of assimilation in Japan. Authentic Hajiki dates from the Kingdom of the Ryukyus (14th century to the 19th century), and girls are given tattoos as a symbol of the transition to women. But Hajithi's art is not just a status symbol, it has other meanings. For a variety of reasons, tattoos are applied to the back of a woman's hand. Some traditional explanations assert that they are a means of drawing family ancestry and others say that it is Japanese pirates that make girls not to be taken hostage.
Tattoos have steadily entered the mainstream of British society. The tattoo is not a sign of rebellion, it is regarded as a symbol of conformity. If you do not have it yet, you are very strange. The recognition of tattoos is changing, and for some people this means to impersonate the tattoos they were proud of. 67% of people feel that I am tattooing and I feel sorry, I feel that I need to hide them at some point. More than 8.16% of men have never hid tattoos, and women's tattoo ratings are more proposals for these statistics. Others believe that if they show tattoos they will have a negative impact on their employment prospects.