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These Old Blue Arms: The Life and Work of Amund Dietzel by Jon Reiter. Solid State Publishing, 2010, ISBN 978-0-578-05967-9. These Old Blue Arms: The Life and Work of Amund Dietzel, Volume 2 by Jon Reiter. Solid State Publishing, 2011, ISBN 0-578-05967-3. Bad Boys and Tough Tattoos by Samuel M. Steward. Routledge, 1990, ISBN 0-918393-76-0.
Bert Grimm (born Edward Cecil Reardon, February 8, 1900 – June 15, 1985) was an American tattoo artist dubbed the "grandfather of old school". Grimm's work and mentorship contributed to the development and popularity of the American Traditional tattoo style. [1]
Samuel Morris Steward (July 23, 1909 – December 31, 1993), also known as Phil Andros, Phil Sparrow, was an American tattoo artist and pornographer.. Throughout his life, he kept extensive secret diaries, journals and statistics of his sex life.
Fukushi Masaichi (福士 政一, 30 January 1878 – 3 June 1956) was a Japanese physician, pathologist and Emeritus Professor of Nippon Medical School in Tokyo. He was the founder or nite of the world's only known collection of tattoos taken from the dead. [1]
"Death before dishonor" flash circa 1940. Tattoo flash is any tattoo design that is pre-prepared for customers to avoid the need for custom designs, or as a starting point for custom work. Tattoo flash was designed for rapid tattooing and used in "street shops"—tattoo shops that handle a large volume of standardized tattoos for walk-in customers.
Jonathan Shaw in Fun City Tattoo, showing the ring of the Death Is Certain Club. Jonathan Dowling Shaw (born July 4, 1953) is an American tattoo artist and writer. He founded New York City's oldest tattoo shop, Fun City Tattoo, in 1976, [1] before tattooing was legal in the city.
Together they had a daughter, Lotteva, who started tattooing at the age of nine and went on to become a tattoo artist herself. [2] [3] As an apprentice of her husband, Wagner learned how to give traditional "hokey-pokey" tattoos—despite the invention of the tattoo machine by Samuel O'Reilly on December 8, 1891—and became a tattooist herself ...
Death The Todesrune is the inverted version of the Lebensrune or "life rune". It was based on the ᛦ or Yr rune, which originally meant "yew". [11] It was used by the SS to represent death on documents and grave markers in place of the more conventional † symbol used for such purposes. [3] Tyr: Leadership in battle