Marked Conversations™
A tattoo can be art, identity, and memory, but it is also a design problem that has to live on a moving body for decades. We sit down with Roberto “Mr. Nobody,” an Italian tattoo artist now working at Seven Tattoo Studio in Las Vegas, to unpack how black and gray realism gets built from the ground up: family influence, travel, obsession with references, and the slow process of refining taste. Roberto shares what it was like growing up in an Italian tattoo shop in the 90s, when artists had to do a bit of everything, and how that foundation shaped his approach to composition and body flow. We talk about his creative influences, from biomechanical tattooing to color realism, and why studying flow, depth, and anatomy matters whether you do realism, geometric, ornamental, or Japanese styles. If you care about tattoos that age well, you will hear his clearest standards: placement that fits the body, believable volumes, and lighting that makes the subject read clean from across the room. Then we hit the hot topics: tattoo trends that ignore dynamism, the idea of “earning” hands, neck, face, and head tattoos, and why a single visible tattoo on an otherwise untattooed body can feel visually unbalanced. Finally, we go deep on anesthesia tattoos, including the cost, the time pressure on the artist, and the cultural question of whether skipping pain skips the ritual. If you enjoy honest tattoo culture conversations and practical advice about realism tattoo design and placement, subscribe, share this with a friend who is planning their next piece, and leave a review with your take: do you think anesthesia tattoos are smart, or do they miss the point?
22 episodios
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