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Dillon Forte (born February 1987 in Santa Monica, California) [1] [2] is an American tattoo artist and entrepreneur, based in Oakland and Venice, Los Angeles. [3] Known for his use of sacred geometry-inspired patterns, Forte has been featured in Paramount Network's The Art of Ink (2018) and the Amazon Studios comedy Jean-Claude Van Johnson (2017).
[1] [9] The remaining 4% includes the palms of her hands which is a problematic area to tattoo. Her body modifications also include a split tongue, subdermal implants, piercings, ear expansions, eye tattoos, scarification, and dental implants. [7] [10] [11] She frequently attends international festivals and conventions on tattoos and body ...
Ryan Ashley DiCristina [4] (née Malarkey, born April 29, 1987), known as Ryan Ashley, is an American tattoo artist known for her appearances on the television shows Ink Master and its spin-offs. Her signature style reflects her training and experience as a fashion designer: Ashley specializes in black-and-gray designs with beadwork , lace ...
Vanna White posted a rare photo of her daughter, Giovanna “Gigi” Santo Pietro, and fans can’t get over their resemblance. “Happy 27th to my amazing daughter,” White, 67, captioned an ...
An Australian woman went blind for three weeks following a tattoo that left the sclera of her eyeballs bright blue. In an interview with Barcroft TV last month, 24-year-old Amber Luke, of Brisbane ...
Earlier this month, the Bachelor alum revealed she'd gotten blepharoplasty, a reconstructive surgery that enhances the appearance of eyelids. She shared raw post-operation images to Instagram on ...
Lucky Diamond Rich pictured at Montreal, Canada's PuSh International Performing Arts Festival in 2008.. Gregory Paul McLaren (born 1971), [1] who goes by the name of Lucky Diamond Rich, is a New Zealand-British performance artist, street performer and international performing arts festival performer, whose acts include sword swallowing and juggling on a unicycle.
Writer and artist Shannon Larratt photoshopped his eyes in a photo to look like the blue eyes of the Fremen in Frank Herbert's novel Dune. Inspired by his then-wife's eye implant surgery, [6] he reached out to Howie "Luna Cobra" Rollins to devise a method to color his eyes permanently blue. Cobra agreed to attempt the procedure if Larratt could ...