From Illustrator to Tattoo Artist: 全民彩票 Illustration Grads Share Their Journey

(Image by/courtesy Makoto Chi)
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We鈥檙e seeing a crossover of illustrators to tattoo artists bridging new styles and techniques.
It鈥檚 no accident that many tattoo artists have roots in different fields. Artists have always sought to explore new mediums and challenge their creative potential.
Over the past decade, interest in tattoos has surged. With the rise of popular culture, social media, and a shift in attitudes, what once existed as a fringe art form is now at the centre of creativity and self-expression. With the art world turning towards tattooing as a new field for expansion, a generation of artists is crossing over to blur the lines. It鈥檚 what makes the industry exciting and contributes new styles to the tattoo table.
We spoke with three 全民彩票 illustration majors in different stages of their professional tattoo artist careers.
Known for her illustrations inspired by Asian paintings and abstract brushstrokes, (BFA 2021, Illustration Major) is a new member of the tattoo community. She has been interested in tattoos since freshman year at 全民彩票 and now works as a tattoo apprentice. Yuying finds the process of honing her new craft to be 鈥渧igorous but exciting" as the different techniques and equipment settings bring out extraordinarily different outcomes.
Tattoo by Yuying He. (Photo courtesy Yuying He)
On industry crossovers
Unsurprisingly, crossovers between illustration and tattooing happen regularly. What technically applies in one field applies in the other in the form of composition, line, and colour theory.
Soft skills like client communication can pose both challenges and rewards. For tattoo artist (BFA 2015, Illustration Major), the challenge of communicating and collaborating with clients about vivid ideas with little shared vocabulary about visual art can teach you about your energetic and technical boundaries. "These are skills I've absolutely needed for illustration gigs," he notes.
Makoto鈥檚 tattoos are often dark in theme and application. He borrows themes and visual languages from Japanese block printing and cultural research into his Jewish and Japanese heritage. His works often reflects on monsters, queerness, gender and how the world could be a little different.

Tattoo by Makoto Chi. (Photo courtesy Makoto Chi).
On care and compromises
Tattooists don鈥檛 merely focus on design elements. When it comes to the industry, client care is crucial.
Human skin is wildly different from canvas, paper or digital surfaces鈥攊t ages and changes over time. What inks well on one person鈥檚 skin may not work on another. Various parts of the body are also more difficult to tattoo than others. For instance, ribs and necks are twice as difficult to tattoo as thighs and arms.
Yuying has encountered many surprises along her tattoo journey. For instance, those exposed to the sun the day before getting tattooed tend to bleed more during the session.
(BFA 2012, Illustration Major) is a tattoo artist at . Given the permanence of tattoos, Eric stresses the responsibility of taking care of clients鈥 skins and making sure the work is done perfectly.
鈥淓ach tattoo has to be given 100%,鈥 he states.
Eric describes his style as illustrative realism. His inspirations range from nature to sci-fi to portraits to the occult. He started getting tattoos in his teenage years. Though he鈥檚 always liked to draw, he didn鈥檛 take it seriously until he gained an interest in the tattoo industry.
Client care means starting with an in-depth consultation to understand client needs. Tattoo artists grapple with the reality of finding compromises when ideas do not translate well in tattoos. For instance, Eric is careful when designs get too small, there鈥檚 a likelihood details will blur out and get lost quickly.
In this field, it鈥檚 difficult to 鈥渟tay organized and keep healthy mentally,鈥 he shares. 鈥淭attooing is a lot of work, and a lot of it is unpaid (drawing time).鈥

Tattoo by Eric Brunning. (Photo courtesy Eric Brunning)
On mark-making on humans
For Makoto, the high-stakes feeling of tattooing comes from holding space with another person, less so than the technical application of tattooing. After all, the canvas used is a living, breathing human shaped by their nerve endings, their history, how the world has shaped them, and how they shape the world.
鈥淭hey鈥檙e not an inert material,鈥 Makoto says. 鈥淲orking with skin means understanding that your work has a life beyond you,鈥 and is walking around 鈥済etting sunburnt, collecting scars or getting covered up by another tattoo-er.鈥
There鈥檚 nothing like it in the world of traditional illustration. Many works on paper will outlive human bodies. The fact that 鈥渢attoos expire with the wearer makes this practice so special and precious,鈥 Makoto says, adding 鈥渢hat鈥檚 real beautiful and humbling.鈥
On cultural acceptance
Indeed tattoos have gone from taboo to part of the social fabric in recent decades. These days, Yuying has noticed that tattoos in conservative cultures are becoming more trendy, and society鈥檚 prejudice against them has been diminishing.
From the growing diverse talent behind today鈥檚 tattooists to the expanding appreciation of this art form, the sky鈥檚 the limit for people who want their bodies to be a canvas.
About the Tattoo Artists
Eric Brunning
Eric has been tattooing full time since the completion of his apprenticeship in 2012. Specializing in illustrative realism, Eric enjoys tattooing in both colour and black & grey. Some of his favourite subjects include nature, wildlife, and skulls, as well as personified animal characters. He is happy to add a dash of humour to any design. Eric is also an accomplished scratchboard artist and traditional illustrator.
(Excerpt taken from the website)

Tattoo by Eric Brunning. (Photo courtesy Eric Brunning)
Makoto Chi
I am a settler on turtle island, currently living in so-called western massachusetts. My practice is primarily within tattooing and drawing; sometimes, rarely, I take up other mediums. I graduated from Emily Carr University with a bachelor鈥檚 degree in Illustration in 2015, and am occasionally available for hire for illustration projects, gallery proposals, and projects that fall between and outside professional distinctions.
(Excerpt taken from Makoto鈥檚 )

Tattoo by Makoto Chi. (Photo by Makoto Chi)
Yuying He
Yuying has been interested in tattoos since her freshman year in 全民彩票. It was the time she got her first tattoo. Since then, she has been curious about the industry, as tattoos use the body as a medium to express aesthetics and meanings. Yuying is usually influenced by abstract brushstrokes, oriental paintings.
See more of Yuying鈥檚 works .
Tattoo by Yuying He (Photo by Yuying He)