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Tuesday, February 22, 2011

5 Tricks to Great Lettering




  1. Keep it short and sweet.

    Whether your words are from a poem, a movie, a verse of Scripture, or a song, remember that short quotes work better than long ones. For example, "Fearless", "No Risk: No Reward", and "Faith" are better than "I am not afraid of anything", "I like to take risks because the rewards are worth it", and "I am a ( Crazy Christian, Mental Muslim, Hip Hindu, Zany Zennist, etc.)."

  2. Pick a Good Location.

    For short quotes, the best places are the foot, wrist, back of the neck, ankle and arm. For longer lettering tattoos, the rib cage, shoulder blade, collar/chest, back, and hip area.

  3. Pick a Good Lettering Style/Font.

    Not all fonts will look good as tattoos. I prefer script because it looks nice and usually has a better flow than computer fonts.

    The lettering below is far too busy to stand as a good tattoo. Over time the dots and line will merge together making it illegible. The solution is make it larger and to space the letters.



    Fonts like this one work better. They're bold and have large areas of black. The lettering is also legible.



    In general if you can shrink the font and still read it, it's probably going to be OK to tattoo.

  4. Make sure the style of lettering has the "personality" for the quote.

    For example, this doesn't work:



    The style of lettering doesn't have the right personality for the message. Ol/Gangsta English would be better.

  5. MAKE SURE YOU CHECK YOUR ARTIST'S PORTFOLIO for LETTERING.

    Lettering is one of the MOST TECHNICALLY DEMANDING TATTOOS. There is little room for error. If you don't see a lot of lettering or the lettering is weak (uneven lines, messy fill, illegible), pick another artist. Not much can be done with bad lettering. It usually has to be covered or faded.

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