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So it's been a few months since JJ got my last piece tattooed on her arm,
and now it's time for another!

She has entrusted me with the task of designing a half sleeve to
adorn her right upper arm.

On the half sleeve she's requested a Great Blue Heron,
an animal her husband Lance has a
close tie with,
along with a verse from the Song of Songs that reads:

"Place me like a seal over your heart, like a seal on your arm."

I finally got to work on it this evening, and here is the finalized sketch
that has been approved by JJ,
and that I will be working from.


I had originally planned to work the text into the clouds and
water somehow, but we both opted that it would be a better idea
to put it on the back of her arm with the water lilies, as there
is more room.

Check back,
I'll be updating with a line-art soon.

TO BE CONTINUED...

Misc. Tattoo Designs.

Here are a few designs I've done over the years, and as of yet, to my knowledge
have not been applied.


These are a pair of tattoos I designed for a friend of mine,
and her girlfriend.
She wanted a lock and key with as much detail as would fit on the side of her ankle.
I did my best!


This is a piece I did for a guy I used to live with.
He wanted a beast that looked like it was coming out of his arm.
I thought a Cerberus-like motif would suit him.
I think the hardest part about this one was making the three
heads look attached!


I did this one for an acquaintance of mine.
He requested a pair of die with the faces adding up to 7.


Tattoo design © Sophia Cowan



Not your typical little mermaid.

My second tattoo design request came shortly after JJ showed off my first to my coworkers.

A girl I work with, Amy requested I design her a mermaid tattoo to fit on her side,
and so, sparked by a surge of inspiration, I finished the design
a few days later.
I had agreed to do the piece for free, as she was a friend, and also
for the opportunity to put the finished product in a portfolio.

She loved the design, and from that point it was settled.


A couple months later, she set an appointment to get the tattoo done.
I had requested to go with her, since I was unable to go with JJ
when she got hers done.

However, upon showing up at the tattoo parlor, I learned a few things
that at the time were a little upsetting.

One was that a good 2/3 of my tattoo design had been altered by the tattooist,
and the rest had been traced from my original drawing.




The finished piece is beautiful, as you can see, but it is no longer my work,
and I can not use this photo in a portfolio.

I've chosen to see this as a valuable learning experience.

Tattoo artists, whenever they can, will request the opportunity
to add their own touch to a piece, which is understandable.
In the art world, you have to make a name for yourself wherever you can.

I implore my clients to please keep my pieces as is, and leave
any alterations up to me.


Tattoo design © Sophia Cowan
Tattoo application and redesign © Becky Benson
( www.benaroundtattoos.com )
Photograph © Amy Shumaker

Beginnings

So I had originally started this blog a while back with the intent of writing in it every day, utilizing it for sudden strokes of literary genius that, lets face it, never come.

SO, I have scrapped my original blog idea for something more useful. Something, hopefully, more interesting.

Some time last year (2008), I was asked by my close friend and room mate to design a tattoo for her, Enter text here.commemorating the death of her beloved family dog, Daisy.
At first I was shocked, skeptical, mostly of my own ability to design something intended to become a permanent installment on someone elses body.
Also skeptical that my original design would be appreciated, but scrapped later in favor of something more interesting.

But I must say, I was wrong to doubt on both counts.

After a few different incarnations, I came up with a design that my room mate loved.
We had both agreed that cliche paw prints and things of that nature had no place in her dogs memorial piece, and so she opted instead for something more symbolic.

This was as far as the original design got in my own hands, as JJ insisted she didn't want me to change anything. She liked the sketchiness of it, and requested that I didn't finish it out.

This of course made me extremely fidgety at first, having a raw piece hijacked before it was finished, but that's what she wanted!
And so I let it go.

One evening, a few months later, JJ came home and ran into my room, looking slightly pekid, but beaming from ear to ear.
"Sophie, look what I got!"
I looked at her arm, and was momentarily dumbfounded.
There was my tattoo, looking vibrant in all its colored Enter text here.permanence on the inside of her upper arm.



The tattooist, Becky Benson, from Ben Around Tattoos in our home-town of Charlottesville, VA
had taken my design and cleaned it up with care, swapped the plaque motif
for a banner in favor of a more traditional tattoo look,
and brought the whole thing to life with some color.

I was amazed.
Still am!

Since then, friends near and far had heard of my design, and came to me
requesting designs of their own.
I didn't know what to think. Even now I am still in awe, and
deeply flattered by their requests.

And it's all thanks to my friend JJ, who thought enough of my artwork to
make me a part of a very important life decision.

In turn, I would like to invite whoever may be reading this to join me in my journey,
of which this is just the beginning!


Tattoo design © Sophia Cowan
Tattoo application and alterations © Becky Benson
Photograph © Becky Benson
( www.benaroundtattoos.com)