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Archive for the ‘tattoo’ Category

Trendoldwomentattoo

07/2/11 09:35 AM ET

After four years of deliberation, 99-year-old Mimi Rosenthal swapped the support of her Winnie Walker for the comfort of a black leather chair at Requiem Body Art in Spring Hill, Fla.

Rosenthal, now 101, did not always like tattoos. Blame it on the generational divide: according to Life magazine, only 6 percent of the population had a tattoo in 1936 — a number that has more than tripled since. When her granddaughter Meredith got her first tattoo at 17,  Rosenthal, then 85, did not approve.

As Meredith steadily accumulated more and more ink, however, Rosenthal came around.

“Mimi really started toying with the idea of getting a tattoo when she was 95,” said close family friend and, as luck would have it, tattoo artist Michelle Gallo-Kohlas, 39. “I told her, ‘Mimi you aren’t getting any younger, if you want a tattoo, you should probably get it now.’” Gallo-Kohlas gave Rosenthal her first tattoo: a dime-sized butterfly on her ankle. Rosenthal now has two more: a larger butterfly she got on her 100th birthday and a sunflower she had inked for her 101st.

“I don’t know if it’s because we are in Florida and everyone comes here to retire, but most of my clients are in the older bracket,” Gallo-Kohlas told The Huffington Post. “We see a lot of women in their sixties and seventies getting their first tattoos.” Gallo-Kohlas recalls a woman in her sixties who got a tattoo because everyone in the golf clique at her gated community had one. It seemed like the thing to do in order to fit in.

With 6 percent of the 64 and up crowd, fifteen percent of Baby Boomers (44-64), and 32 percent of Gen Xers (30-45) sporting tattoos, Florida retirees are hardly the only mature first-time tattoo seekers.

First-timer Susan Sarandon got inscribed with her children’s initials at 61, rationalizing, “Why not? I turned 60 and after a while you think, ‘Well I’ve only got my body for a few more years anyway.’” Gloria Steinem toyed with the idea of getting a tattoo for her 70th birthday, telling Slate about her partiality to the ” art nouveau-looking ones that I see on women’s backs just below their jeans… rebelliously known as a tramp stamp.” Jennifer Aniston, 42, got her first tattoo last week in memory of her deceased pooch Norman.

Sailor Bill Johnson, the Vice President of the National Tattoo Association (NTA) told The Huffington Post that, although the organization doesn’t record figures, over the last eight to ten years there has been a noticeable increase in women coming in to get their first tattoo at more advanced ages.

“Tattooing has become more in vogue, and people are releasing any inhibitions they might have had,” Johnson said. “I’ll always remember, it was 25 years ago a woman in her mid-70s walked in and said, ‘I want a tattoo; I want a rose on my breast.’ Her husband had been less enthusiastic, so she got it when he had passed.”

Women’s motivations for getting inked later in life vary. For some it’s a way of asserting independence or an act of self-expression. Others do it to remember or honor someone else, and still others do it on a whim.

Lois Schoenbrun, 58, got hers while on a vacation with her son Yoki in Hawaii. “Everyone on the wait staff had visible tattoos, and when our waitress came to our table, I asked where on the island we could go to get one,” Schoenbrun said.

“My son looked at me and said, you’re going to let me get a tattoo?” she recalls. “And I said, this isn’t for you — it’s for me.”

Schoenbrun’s son, 16 at the time, got the Chinese symbol for dream and then-50-year-old Schoenbrun got a rurbrum lily, also known as a stargazer. “It is something that always brought me happiness and a feeling of calm,” she explained.

An executive at an international nonprofit, Schoenbrun said that her tattoo isn’t visible at work and she isn’t disclosing its location, “not because it is risqué, but rather it is nobody’s business.”

Getting a tattoo later in life definitely has its advantages: those who do so are unlikely to be told that they’ll regret it when they’re older, and the tattoos are less likely to fade or migrate within their lifetimes.

“I thought, I’m old enough now that, even if it does change a little bit, it won’t be 40 or 50 years of changing,” said Mary Fischer, 58. Growing up, she thought of tattoos as only for “bikers and gangsters.” Since taking up motorcycling with her husband three years ago, Fischer has changed her tune, and the equestrian-turned-biker chick got her first tattoo last week to honor her recently deceased mother.

“With more mature women getting their first tattoos, they aren’t getting one to show off at the beach,” Gallo-Kohlas said. “It can be an angel in memory of a loved one or a design that they have always wanted — their tattoos are meaningful.”

from:  http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/07/01/many-women-get-tattoos-po_n_889026.html

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using the number/letter grid:

1      2      3       4       5       6      7      8      9
A      B     C       D       E       F      G      H      I
J      K      L      M      N       O      P      Q      R
S      T      U      V      W      X      Y      Z

Where:

A = 1              J = 1              S = 1

B = 2              K = 2             T = 2

C = 3              L = 3             U = 3

D = 4              M = 4            V = 4

E = 5              N = 5            W = 5

F = 6              O = 6             X = 6

G = 7              P = 7             Y = 7

H = 8              Q = 8             Z = 8

I = 9               R = 9

Mimi Rosenthal

4             5    3

the most important thing she can do = MN = 45 = Tattoo.

how she obtains her heart’s desire = ML = 43 = Toying with the idea.  Enjoying.  Having fun.

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find out your own numerology at:

http://www.learnthenumbers.com/

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Why DeShawn Stevenson has Lincoln tattooed on his neck

Mon Jun 20 06:41pm EDT

Well, of course DeShawn Stevenson(notes) got an
Abraham Lincoln tattoo on his neck because the 16th president of the United
States issued
the Emancipation Proclamation
, even during a time when the states weren’t
technically united. We knew that, but it’s nice for DeShawn to clarify it.

There
has been some quibble
as to why Stevenson put the tattoo of Lincoln,
surrounded by two number 5s (Lincoln, for our international readers, is featured
on the American five-dollar bill) on his neck two years ago. But DeShawn, in an
interview with 105.3 The Fan in Dallas (as presented to us by Sports
Radio Interviews
), has finally clarified the thing that was pretty obvious
from the outset:

“I was going to get Martin Luther King and I told Gilbert Arenas(notes). You
should never tell nobody your idea. That summer, he came back and got it. So I
didn’t know who to get. I got Abraham Lincoln because he freed the slaves. I
just had Abraham Lincoln and, from a distance, everybody kept saying, ‘Who is
that?’ So I put the five-dollar bill so everybody would stop asking
me.”

from:  http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/blog/ball_dont_lie/post/Why-DeShawn-Stevenson-has-Lincoln-tattooed-on-hi?urn=nba-wp5288

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DeShawn Stevenson was born on April 3rd, 1981 according to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DeShawn_Stevenson

April 3rd, 1981

4 + 3 +1+9+8+1 = 26 = his life lesson = what he is here to learn = Popularity.  Photos.  The media.  In the news.

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using the number/letter grid:

1      2      3       4       5       6      7      8      9
A      B     C       D       E       F      G      H      I
J      K      L      M      N       O      P      Q      R
S      T      U      V      W      X      Y      Z

Where:

A = 1              J = 1              S = 1

B = 2              K = 2             T = 2

C = 3              L = 3             U = 3

D = 4              M = 4            V = 4

E = 5              N = 5            W = 5

F = 6              O = 6             X = 6

G = 7              P = 7             Y = 7

H = 8              Q = 8             Z = 8

I = 9               R = 9

DeShawn Stevenso

4                   55   5

the most important thing he can do (DE), how he appears to the world (DN), and how he obtains his heart’s desire (DN) all = 45 = Tattoos.

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6:36 pm, May 9th, 2011

You knew the Utah Jazz’ Andrei Kirilenko had some crazy hair, and today we learned that he’ll put some unusual things on his body himself, too. Kirilenko apparently decided to get a back tattoo recently, and it seems that when he decided to go for something, he really goes for it. As in, this:

Now, as far as we know, there’s no unwritten rule that to truly be considered a back tat, the tat must take up almost the entire back region, but in case there is…Kirilenko’s covered. Literally. That’s his World of Warcraft character. (His character is the one riding the massive dragon.)

Anyway, here’s another picture. We really hope Kirilenko likes the way this turned out.

from:  http://www.sportsgrid.com/media/andrei-kirilenko-back-tattoo-photos/

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Andrei Kirilenko was born on February 18th, 1981 according to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrei_Kirilenko

Each letter of the first name rules 9 years of life.  Ages 27 to 36 are ruled by the sum of the day of birth and the 4th letter of the first name.

February 18th, 1981    Andrei Kirilenko

18 (born on the 18th of the month) + 18 (r is the 18th letter of the alphabet) = 36

So from ages 27 to 36 he has the numbers 18 and 36 going on.

18 = Active imagination.  Art.

36 = Shoulders.  Back.

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