In late May, a team member reached out to me, asking if I was interested in writing a review of the ‘full Ephemeral experience’ at their new Atlanta location. Aftercare is the same too, following the normal line-up of unscented soap and strong moisturizer. It’s applied with a typical tattoo gun, and ink is deposited under your skin like a normal tattoo. Launched in 2021, Ephemeral uses medical-grade, biodegradable ink that’s designed to fade in 9-15 months. It was there I learned about Ephemeral, the world’s first ‘made to fade’ tattoo studio. The tattoo side of TikTok is my favorite way to watch others design, ink and receive beautiful pieces. I’ve been collecting tattoos since I was eighteen and don’t ask about my failed stick and pokes. Ever since I was a kid, I’ve loved the look of bold, dark art inked on your body. Allow me to explain.Thumbnail graphic courtesy of Cait Jayme. The bigger difference, in my opinion, was the pain level. The obvious distinction is the ink, which, as of right now, is only available in black. Otherwise, pretty much everything else is business as usual, from the tattoo gun to the equipment. Like any other artist, they each have their own tattooing "style," so you'll want to check out the brand's Instagram if you have a particular aesthetic in mind. Each is trained in shading techniques that work best with the made-to-fade ink (translation: that don't overwork the skin), such as stippling, hatching, and etching. The tattooists are all vetted and legit, often coming from well-known studios across the city. You share your design idea with the artist via a handy online survey ahead of time, show up to the studio (the one I went to was in Brooklyn, but there are three other studios in San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Atlanta), and lie back on the leather tattoo chair under a ring light. What happens during an ephemeral appointment is similar to that of a regular tattoo appointment. Here's how the whole thing went - and how the ephemeral ink faded over time. I say: try telling that to a drunk girl in love.) This made the premise of a semipermanent design sound extra appealing.Īs such, I found myself booking an appointment with artist Marissa Boulay, sitting next to the world's most devoted *NSYNC fan, and going under the needle for my very first made-to-fade tattoo. (They say getting a tattoo with a partner is a kiss of death - the reason Winona and Johnny or Tyga and Kylie ended in disaster. You see, I've had my share of experiences with ink I no longer wanted. Simply put, it's a real tattoo sans the commitment - which means it's precisely what I was looking for. Like dissolvable stitches, your body releases them naturally. Here's how it works: the proprietary ink is composed of small particles - made from medical-grade, bioabsorbable, and biocompatible polymers with high-quality pigments routinely used in foods, cosmetics, and other products, the company's CEO Jeffrey Liu previously told POPSUGAR - that shrink over time. (What if you meet this person and they disappoint you? What if they turn out to be a bonafide Bad Human?) But what if the design isn't permanent? The latest made-to-fade technology in "ephemeral" tattoos means that's no longer a pipe dream the ink is designed to slowly break down over time, fully disappearing after 10 months to a year. In theory, the idea of getting a pop culture tattoo - or someone else's face, period - etched on your body might seem risky. "Oh, he's coming into town this weekend and I thought it would be funny," the man replies. Blown up on the tiny screen was a cartoonishly large portrait of Chris Kirkpatrick (yes, that Chris Kirkpatrick from *NSYNC), of which he kindly requested be inked on his upper thigh. She was standing above the man sitting next to me in the waiting area at Ephemeral Tattoo in Brooklyn with an iPad in hand. "Um, I have to ask," the tattoo artist blinks in my direction, "Why did you choose this particular tattoo?"
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