mardi 20 mai 2014

Skull Sleeve And Japanese Sleeve Tattoos

By Darren Hartley


Available in an avalanche of styles and colors, skull sleeve tattoos can be awesome and perfect tattoos for both sexes. They are the choice of tattoo enthusiasts in the lookout for unique and cool body ink art designs. In their ability to display very prominent skull images, they offer unique hallmarks to tattoo wearers.

The appropriateness of skull sleeve tattoos is brought to the core when worn by people who want their art to be easily seen by everybody. The more masculine image they bring make them perfect choices for men. The skull has always been a well-liked tattoo symbol probably because incorporating it with other appropriate symbols has been proven to produce more visually interesting results.

The skull image as portrayed in skull sleeve tattoos echoes of universality and flexibility. The skull can be a symbol of fierceness and evil or an expression of elegance and charm, depending on how it is depicted in the design. A whole different theme can be created once the skull is incorporated with other tattoo symbols.

Japanese sleeve tattoos are made up of unique designs because they mimic the beauty of paintings. Apart from putting the art form of body painting to a pedestal, they offer different meanings for each and every Japanese tattoo design.

When incorporated in Japanese sleeve tattoos, the Sakura or cherry blossom is looked at as a life representative. Luck is what a Koi fish tattoo brings to its wearer. Strength coming from supernatural powers is what Japanese dragon tattoos expresses. Good luck is what a wearer of a Hannya mask tattoo brings to his surroundings.

The Hannya mask when contained in Japanese sleeve tattoos is not a veneration of Satan or the devil. This is contrary to the popular belief that says otherwise. Hannyas are actually terrestrial monsters that became so because of their confusion in dealing with their feelings of passion, jealousy and hate. The mask is worn in Japanese theater to signify devil possession. The only way out of this possession is a complete devotion to Buddha. Japanese Buddhism carries this concept of hell in its tradition.




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