hobartonfire
Schwag
hobartonfire

All the married people I know have separate tooth brushes. I’ve been married 10 years and don’t share. That’s gross.

“I love The Office. The BRITISH one. *cough PLEBEIAN cough*”

Nothing, it’s just the people who go around acting like their love of British TV somehow makes them unique and especially cultured.

It doesn’t look like any of those examples are neck tattoos... Which given that it was the placement, not the subject matter I’m not sure what point you’re making.

No. Her tattoo is terrible. The placement and the script used look really bad. Can’t wait till it looks awful and blurry in 10 years.

This would apply had she gone to the artist that did Gucci’s face tattoo. However, since she did not, it doesn’t really apply. And seriously, can you not ready any of the other comments that point out the face tattoo issue?

So, let’s assume you’re right, those are tacky. An article, and then shaming of other people’s work, is justified because he stated that he thought something was tacky in response to her demanding to know why he wouldn’t perform services for her? Who cares that he said it was tacky?

I mean, these really are the kind of lame, stupid, tacky, generic, entitled people that live in lower Manhattan, now, I guess.

In the midst of all this whiny, entitled bullshit, it also just occurred to me that this dumb fucking white girl don’t even know she can go to almost any jewelry shop on 5th Ave. down in Sunset Park and get any name tattooed on her neck for $25, no question asked, and, last I checked, Adorned had a shop minimum of

Also, your neck tattoo of your daughter’s name is stupid and tacky, but that’s really not the point.

Plenty of artists will not tattoo you in a highly visible place unless you already have a lot of tattoos. It has nothing to do with you being a woman. I’m a man who was refused tattoos on my hands over 15 years ago at New York Adorned, and, at the time, I had large forearm tattoos and large-gauge ear plugs, as far as

This is what happens when the Park Slope set tries to embrace feminism and just highlights the class issues behind it.

You don’t seem to understand where the artists are coming from and I find this whole article to be in incredibly poor taste, especially the bratty insults directed at someone who simply told you “no.”

I agree with Dan. I myself am a tattoo artist (and a woman, at that), and I probably would have refused to do it, or at least tried to talk you out of it. I’ve refused men and women alike for things like this, it has nothing to do with gender. Neck tattoos are a horse of a different color in tattooing, many artists

This is the most whiny, entitled white girl thing I have read in quite some time. Kudos.

I don’t think so. Some of his tattoos looked very good. Posting them on the internet as a way to poke fun (not only at him, but at the people who chose those tattoos, who the author does NOT know personally) is beyond petty.

This is some of the most petty white girl bullshit I’ve ever seen. Such righteous indignation over the the most bland beige white-bread tattoo.

So your thesis is Dan denied your request for a neck tattoo because of your gender. And your basis for that assumption is that he’s done a bunch of (in your opinion) tacky tattoos on other people. None of which are on necks. You did no research on the general feeling about neck tattoos in the tattooing community,

This is the absolute worst. Any decent tattoo artist in the city where I am from plainly states on their websites that they will not tattoo a persons hand, face, or neck unless they have a substantial amount of work on their body that is both noticeable and difficult to conceal. Also, names are actively discouraged

I must asked where you went to get your fingers done and do you have a lot of tattoos.