What it takes to create a tattoo
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What it takes to create a tattoo
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By Fatima Shaheen Niazi
Photos By mohammad ali, white star
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N
o neon signs or billboards
indicate that an apartment
building in Karachi’s
Defence area houses a
tattoo studio. The entrance to a flat on
the first floor offers the first indication
of that: it is painted bright yellow,
the same colour as the studio’s logo.
Inside, walls have a grey brick pattern
— with wooden alcoves decorated
with knick-knacks such as vinyl
records, small speakers, clocks and
comic book figurines.
In one of the rooms here, Rameez
Arif makes tattoos on his client’s
bodies. The walls of his studio are
decorated with numerous tattoo
designs — enough to distract anyone
going through the painful process of
getting one themselves.
Arif started working as a tattoo
artist nine years ago — almost by
default. His wife wanted to get a
tattoo, but he could not find anyone
in Karachi who could make an
attractive design while also ensuring
that she did not get an infection. So,
he decided to do it himself.
He imported the required equipment
from the United States and started
researching on how to make a tattoo.
The first tattoo he ever created was
on his own leg. After rehearsing for a
year, he finally inked his wife’s body.
Today, Arif is a known tattoo artist
in Karachi, with a large and rich
clientele. He charges 18,000 rupees
for a three-square-inch tattoo. Any
other studio would do that for
half the price. “I use organic ink
and sterilised equipment imported
from the United States [to avoid
the danger of tattoos becoming
infected]”, he says, explaining why
his rates are high.
Rameez Arif is not only interested in the art of inking the human body but also does graphic and interior designing. His talent is evident from the bright
and creative decor he has chosen for his studio. Instead of simply plastering the walls with samples of work done for his clients, he has made an extra effort
to give his studio the appearance of a creative space by adorning it with photos, art pieces and sketches.
Creating a tattoo requires a lot of concentration and skill since a single mistake can ruin
the whole image being inked into the skin.
A
sif Raza, too, runs a
tattoo studio in Defence,
Karachi. His workplace,
on the fourth floor of
an apartment building, also looks
like any other residence in the
neighbourhood — until you get in.
opening spread: Rameez Arif creates a
permanent tattoo on a client’s body.
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Before a tattoo is
carved on a client’s
body, the artist
makes a sketch on
paper in order to
get the design right.
A refelection of the
waiting room at a tattoo
studio in Karachi.
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The waiting room of his studio has
ivory walls and a wooden floor. On
a wall behind a table, a board carries
a number of tattoo designs. Inside a
small room at the farther end of the
waiting room, a client is getting a
tattoo. His feet can be seen and the
buzzing sound of the tattoo gun can
be heard through a glass door. He
twitches his feet every time the tattoo
needle scratches his skin.
Raza has been working as a tattoo
artist for the past 11 years and creates
conceptual designs which can be
permanent as well as temporary.
“Some people want the names of their
love interests inked on their bodies,
especially on Valentine’s Day,” he
says. “Many of them return to get
the names modified after a breakup.”
Raza is passionate about his work
but he occasionally receives threats
that leave him nervous. “I receive
threatening phone calls sometimes,”
he says. The callers tell him to shut
down his studio because “tattoos are
not permissible in Islam.”
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hulam Mustafa developed
an interest in tattooing at the
age of 17. He rigged a tattoo
machine by attaching a
needle and a motor to a toy gun and
learnt the art of tattooing from an older
mentor.
Soon, he found a large clientele
among Hindu men and women. “They
believe they will not get married if
they do not get tattoos. They have
had this tradition [for centuries],” he
says. He would charge people 100
rupees for tattooing someone’s name
on themselves.
However, Mustafa’s family and
friends did not like his work. They
insisted that making tattoos on
human bodies was un-Islamic.
In 2017, 10 years after first tattoo
venture, he decided to quit. He now
does Islamic calligraphy on rice
grains, turns them into jewellery
and key chains, and sells them at an
amusement park in Karachi. p
Zain Ali, a regular client at a tattoo studio in Karachi, has an array of tattoos on his arms.
Rameez Arif creating a tattoo design that
he believes will bring him on a par with
international tattoo artists.
Asif Raza inks a Superman tattoo on a client’s arm at his studio.
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