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#tatoo embroidery
iradizainer · 3 months
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kulay-ng-banaag · 1 year
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“Not all stories etched with ink and blood were on paper. I just think he gets to keep something.”
Physical Appearance (Tattoos) Headcanons for HWS Philippines
CW: war, violence, mentions of sex
(I'm sorry that sounds like clickbait... it's on the topic of feats that merit a tattoo).
UPDATE (03/09/23): Minor revisions to PH script tattoos
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Image 02 Description: Pantoron Manobo Pangotoeb (blue). Butbut Kalinga Whatok (red). Precolonial Visayan Batuk (yelllow). PH Scripts: Baybayin, Hanunó'o, Buhid, Kulitan, Tagbanwa (white).
Image 03 Description: Pantoron Manobo Pangotoeb. paloos (monitor lizard). ngipon-ngipon (teeth-like) + pisol (band). tirog (ladder-like). linayon (lines).
Image 04 Description: Precolonial Visayan Batuk. flower (lotus). flower (gumamela). flower (own design). "flowers" can also be interpreted as a "sun." reptile scales. can also be interpreted as "ocean weaves," "rivers," or "mountains."
Image 05 Description: Butbut Kalinga Whatok. inar-archan (ladder). chuyos (chest parallel lines). gayaman (centipede). whilig (mountain). pachok/chawwang (river). tinatalaaw (day & night). tinulipao (snakeskin). tabwhad (snake). inud-uchan (rain). *Labels with no given local terms are from designs modernized for tourists ("family," "traveler/compass/crab").
Image 06 Description: Extra Visual Notes. [encircled in blue] *Kalinga tatoo motifs also found in pottery. [encircled linayon] also known as binulibud (Kalinga). [yellow-highlighted chuyos] Similar pattern with chest tattoos of other N. Luzon groups. Also believed to imitate the outspread wings of a tulayan (eagle). [encircled in red] *animal motifs from folklore! [encircled paloos] Predominant animal motif among the tattooed Cordillera peoples. [encircled yellow] Manobo tattoo motifs also found in embroidery. [leg tattoos encircled in white] Visually similar to Kalinga tattoos. "inar-archan" can be ocean waves or "whilig." "tinatalaaw" can also be "pachok/chawwang" or "lusong" (rice mortar) or "sinwhuto/panyat" (rice bundles). [tattoos around forearm and behind the knee encircled in white] Visually similar to Manobo tattoos. triangles can also represent bladed weapons or animal teeth.
Image 07 description: Butbut Kalinga Whatok. khaman (headaxe). inud-uchan (rain). Hanunó'o.
Age of Eligibility for First Tattooing
Manobo: 10-12 years (pre-puberty) Kalinga: 15-20 years (“coming of age”) Visayan: ~20s (adulthood)
Order of Significance
Manobo: N/A; forearms, back, & chest for men (Only women could tattoo their abdomen and calves as well; interestingly among the 3 styles, tattooing on men's abdomens was sparse, if not left completely blank) Kalinga: Wrist —> Back of hand —> Arms —> Chest (+option: sides of torso/legs) —> Back —> Face Visayan: Ankles -> Legs -> Waist -> Chest -> Back -> Face
My idea of tattooing order for Piri would be as such:
Arms, from the wrist (Manobo)
Legs, from the ankles (Visayan)
Chest (Kalinga)
Back (Kalinga)
By tradition, the tattooist decided on the motif, but recipients could also pitch ideas. Piri's script tattoos were his suggestions.
A fully-tattooed arm would take 1 day to complete, while a Kalinga chest whatok was worth 3 days. The tattoo session could even be halted midway, and either the client expressed to resume on another day or simply ended the process altogether. Men would sometimes deliberately hold back on getting tattooed, but this was not without a buildup of peer pressure over time.
Piri got his forearm pangotoeb while young (for a personification) because he wanted to be like the cool, older folks. Poor baby boy would fail to immediately realize how much the process hurt, and he would frequently make up excuses to delay his sessions.
By the time Piri got his leg tattoos, he would gradually fill them up alongside his upper arms, depending on whether he was wandering around the Visayas region or at the Pantaron mountain range down in Mindanao. For sure, Piri received his Kalinga whiing (chest) and dakag* (back) after those parts had been inked.
Notice how I gave him tattoos from Luzon (Kalinga), Visayas, and Mindanao (Manobo)? Hehe.
What constituted getting a tattoo was not exclusive to warfare achievements or headhunting boons. Anything could be a reason for getting a tattoo, as long as the community itself acknowledged it as valid merit.
What exactly did Piri achieve to earn his tattoos? He changes the story every time you ask him.
Was his butt also inked? Yes. I won't show it for fear of unwittingly getting the boot from this platform.
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Buhid, Tagbanwa, and Kulitan never had a virama (the sign for canceling the inherent vowel). There had been attempts to introduce it in the latter two scripts, but it was never successfully mainstreamed. In writing syllables with canceled vowels, one must retain the original syllable in Tagbanwa and Kulit while you no longer had to write the syllable itself in Buhid. Viramas for Baybayin and Hanunó’o were introduced after the precolonial era, neither of the attempts accomplished by native Filipinos.
In taking these scriptwriting nuances into account, one should enunciate the script as it was being read to discern the word being referred to. Even though it was written as “wa-nga-ya”, a Buhid native would naturally understand it to be read as “way ngayan.” Although anyone could attempt to write in any language with these scripts, I wanted to stick to the intended native tongues to showcase how to properly interpret them.
After doing a guided tour in the National Museum of Anthropology, I opted out of using the "modernized" writing systems in exchange for the "historically utilized" method of not including viramas or writing out a character altogether to eliminate the vowel.
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TRANSLATIONS
Baybayin: Sumpa Kita (Tagalog) - “I Swear”
Depending on the tone, you could be proclaiming a promise or a curse. I love it. It was also the phrase that the name of the Philippine national flower, (sampaguita) originated from, which was also one of Indonesia's national flowers (melati putih). IndoPhil fans, start taking notes.
Kulitan: Tadtad (Kapampangan) - “To cut to small pieces (minced, diced, pinked, etc.)”
There was a saying: "Tadtaran decoman, ing catadtad a mitalandang, iyang maquiasaua queya." It could be roughly translated as: "They me cut me into a million pieces, but even one of those pieces is still good enough to marry 'the one.'" Morbid but romantic, and reflective of Piri’s love for Indo (he’d be that cheesy, okay?)
Tagbanwa: “Tablay” - “To cross hills and mountains”
It was a 4-verse song that narrated a variety of topics, ranging from household chores to community gatherings to expeditions to sentiments (positive or negative) for others. Penultimately the tablay served to express “what comes out from the heart.” That was so quintessential Piri.
Hanunó’o: “Harampanan” - “Discussion”
What was interesting was that the same term referred to both the conversations held in settling disputes and the moment of convening between the parents of a couple to consent to their marriage (or not). He might be a social butterfly, but he was constantly under pressure to fulfill the role of an intermediary.
Buhid: “Way Ngayan” - “No name”
I initially drew a different word and decided to change it as it didn’t fit for Piri to carry something he could never wield. Among the highland Tau-Buhid, it was common practice to answer “way ngayan” when outsiders of the community asked for their names. Instead, the outsiders would give a name to the Tau-Buhid being addressed to, and only then can the Tau-Buhid be allowed to speak to them. It’s funny how the Philippines was a name* christened by an outsider.
*The same goes for my headcanon name for precolonial Piri.
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The first name in the tattoo styles referred to the specific location of residence of the studied ethnolinguistic group. It was not a strict requirement to note it down at all times, but more often than not these groups identified themselves by their location.
Supposedly the Panay-Bukidnon/Suludnon preserved precolonial Visayan tattooing, but the one source I found online described it to be more of a freestyle practice. I was also unable to find images of the tattoos on the people themselves. Nonetheless, there was the Pintados Festival that paid homage to the titular tattooed warriors.
I wanted to point out the visual similarities because tattooists were also traveling practitioners to find clients for their work. It was a possible explanation for why tattooed people (if not the particular tattoo style) were observed across the Visayan islands as well as parts of southern Luzon. In the late 19th century, some Bagobo people shared that they were tattooed by an outsider practitioner. Whang-od herself used to be a traveling tattooist.
This was speculation on my part but I believed it was also possible that tattooists also took inspiration from other styles. Chest tattoos for men in both the Visayan tattoos and Manobo pangotoeb both had radial designs on the areola (which I did not draw for Piri’s chest tattoos simply because they clashed). Who knows, maybe a Manobo tattooist encountered the Visayans and wanted to create their version? I liked to think that the variations in motifs and pattern combinations could double as a tattooist's signature.
I allowed for a few liberties here and there in drawing some tattoo motifs for Piri because, at the end of the day, inspiration could come from anywhere. One could also say the variation lies in how artists created their visual interpretations of the sources of inspiration. Even the Kalinga tattoos made available for tourists are borrowed imagery from other groups! In the past, one Kalinga warrior had an eagle tattoo on his arm that was based on the image on an American coin.
Tattoos were meant to be unique to the individual. Their value on having to be earned was on the basis that they reflected not just the personal histories (if not necessarily achievements) of the wearer, but such histories must also be acknowledged by the community granting them.
That last bit was important because while anyone could pay to be tattooed (and it would still represent something about you), you would be considered a fake. Hiya (shame) was a thorn that penetrated deeper around these parts. Although only the Manobo did not have a stigma for not being tattooed, the social pressures still left a mark on Piri (literally!)
If one relied only on tattoos as a visual cue, one would be unable to distinguish which groups individuals belonged to from a distance. If every one of the most significant leaders were tattooed in the exact same patterns, it would be impossible to recognize who’s who until they formally introduced themselves (which no one would have the time for in the middle of combat!) The Visayans had a set of tattoos that could be used by all, which implied some designs were restricted only among the best of the best.
This was HWS Philippines. If he’s going to be the star, he needed to stand out from the crowd.
It would, however, be awkward for Piri when he spent time with certain other groups that carried a strong contempt for the ones he received his tattoos under. He would not be exempt from the consequences.
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Now here was one more reason why artists/designers should not be afraid to modify on the tattoo motifs (as long as one familiarized themselves with the foundations they worked with): The Butbut Kalinga believe it was taboo to copy older designs, all the more if the original recipient was deceased. So in letting a character don some Kalinga whatok, think twice about perfectly copying every last detail from reference image/s!
In the present day, tattoos for visiting tourists from Whang-Od had to make a selection from a prepared guide, all of them modified for a general audience v.s. designs exclusive to esteemed warriors of the past. I used the former for Piri’s Kalinga whatok.
This was where I addressed the elephant in the room.
My understanding of cultural appropriation was that the offense is in cherry-picking culturally significant symbols & practices and then using them out of their intended context by transforming them into pieces that fit the aesthetic criteria of the dominant - and often oppressive - group.
Save for that one taboo, I did not find any other explicitly recorded statement from either the Butbut Kalinga or the Pantoron Manobo forbidding outsiders from using their tattoos. (Mind you, this was all via resources I could access online - screw this pandemic!)
There was also the lingering question regarding the cultural preservation of PH tattooing practices. In the case of the Kalinga whatok, considering that we could not simply reintroduce headhunting in the present day for morality reasons, did that not mean the tattoos had essentially lost their cultural context? If that rendered them invaluable objects, would it not be self-defeating to the purpose of cultural preservation to just let the practice die out?
I sincerely believed it was just as patronizing to assume that even indigenous peoples could adapt and re-contextualize their traditions because it did not fit the (outsider) ideal of preserving their [I am knocking on wood here] "pristine, primitive forms."
Sometimes even good intentions/aspirations could still take away the platform from the ones it was built for.
(I know I just sounded like a hypocrite in saying that so I'm beating you all to it and calling myself out on it.)
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My biggest motivation for manifesting this headcanon at all was because I did not swim with the fanon of amnesiac Piri. 😭💦
I was at odds with what constituted as a collective (national) memory, all the more when not only was the Philippines as the nation we knew today was a far cry from the "nation" (bayan) that existed 1500+ years ago (and that was if you happened to go there, which I do because I also did not swim with chibi Piri by the time Magellan showed his ass up on our shores).
It sucked that we lost much of the perishable writings from that time, but written works were not the only means of cultural/historical preservation. I also disagreed with the implication that only written works counted as a valid archive.
The pen might be mightier than the sword, but efforts to improve literacy skills were a double-edged sword in itself. While it was important to teach people to be better communicators*, measuring intellectual capacity by literacy skills could get problematic. I condemned this assumption because I sincerely did not believe that precolonial Filipinos being unbothered to keep written records was a sign of their “backwardness.” What if they never felt the need to?
Because why bother writing it all down when you could say it out loud instead! We might not have books and written histories, but we got oral histories! Epics, ballads, hymns, riddles, folklores, you name it! People passed down traditions through storytelling, all the more for all the indigenous natives* residing in the nation that resisted imperialistic rule (not just colonial) for centuries! We were a nation of songbirds! And that was why "Piri chronically online on Twitter" was absolutely valid.
Although it was easy to justify the amnesia take because the colonizers massacred so many people, and without the people, you also lost the very guardians of those memories...in my most honest opinion that...registered poorly in my head.
What of the ones who survived? What of the people who lived to tell their tales?
When did we stop listening?
*More often than not, people grew up to be swayed to unwittingly support imperialistic/capitalist/fascist agendas because very subtle propaganda was discreetly inserted into the lesson plans in their formative education. Criticisms on colonial education deserved their own talk for another day.
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What constituted a memory was the affection, the emotion that came with certain experiences. It was why some memories persisted while others were easily forgotten. It was why even memory recollection (which indicated an active search) might not necessarily be true or not. Memory, both in itself and the processes surrounding it, did not follow a linear & and straightforward path (and that was already without taking the complexity of neurobiology into account).
While the merits for a tattoo were generally prescribed through specific or notable acts, I noticed that majority of them seem to share one common affection: Passion. The feeling of an intense, compelling desire for something (or someone).
Among the Manobo (today), most of them were compelled by aesthetic reasons in getting a tattoo. The desire to maintain an appearance that would equally leave an impression on others.
Headhunting/warfare was just the easily cited method, but the Kalinga appraised any act that denoted an individual’s bravery & valor. Bravery in fighting the frontlines, fueled by the compelling desire to defend one’s homeland.
Violence** born out of vengeance is also a thing, and vengeance was just passion manifesting negatively.
Precolonial Visayans had names for tattoos that marked an individual’s first-time experience in war…or love (sex, I guess). Two polar forces treated as equals. I think of how Aphrodite/Venus was also a goddess of war. A goddess of passion.
Headhunting could also have gendered notions that display the "mutual dependence" in the dichotomy of "male/female bloodshed." In a study of the Huaulu people (Seram, Indonesia*), they had a taboo where the men could not participate in headhunting if their wives were menstruating or giving birth. This reinforced the idea that women as "bleeding humans" were as powerfully influential as men who were "bleeders of humans."
On a similar note, there was a pervasive belief in certain other groups that headhunting blessed communities with fertile lands (alongside fertile women). Blood as life essence. Blood as a source of vitality.
Sometimes passion is comparable to being a force of vitality. The driving force of life and death.
Hades game Achilles was onto something when he wrote that Aphrodite "may be the mightiest of all [the Olympians]."
It got complicated, however, because headhunting and warfare were also a means of state violence**. The precolonial Visayans were engaged in and subjected to slave raids, born out of the need to harvest labor for trade motivations (fuck capitalism, am I right?). If all the battle experience from such activities counts as a merit for tattoos, what did that make of Piri?
I thought of how even blood was shed during the process of tattooing. In a way, Piri’s tattoos also functioned as a reminder of all the blood that was shed for him. A reminder of all the people who died for their passions.
Whether it was a price worth paying or not is a conflict he may never find a resolution for.
*They were comparable to the Buaya (Kalinga) in the shared gendered aspect in headhunting. While this implies a cultural backing to Beyer's Wave Migration Theory, the latter was contested by W.H. Scott. In the cited studies below that concentrated on Kalinga tattooing, there were no further details given regarding any connected symbolisms to headhunting.
**Just so we’re all clear, me conducting frank discussions on the topic of violence DID NOT equate to me condoning violence. Remember that Kalinga tattooing diminished because headhunting was outlawed for its nature as an act of violence.
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Fortunately, there was always the option to negotiate out of a fight (nail that persuasion check, Piri!!).
This was where tattoos as an indicator of one’s place in a community came into play: the more tattooed an individual, the more highly regarded they were. It was they who act as the primary mediator for any conflicts that arose.
It was a huge burden to bear for an entity that encompassed so many communities when he was not (exactly) a part of any of them. While his tattoos provided an opportunistic signal for Piri to be treated as someone due equal respect, it also made him vulnerable to open contempt. Righteously so when the community in question had been victims of the same state violence that advocated for a united nation.
Even prejudice could exist within the same group of people: between those who were content interacting with “lowlanders”/”outsiders” and those who adamantly remained isolated, with the latter even denying the “Filipino” identity. However, a people’s resistance in identifying as subjects of an oppressive government should not be cause to disregard their (co-)inhabitation of spaces. Mediation became a necessity to maintain harmonious relations.
It was a struggle that remains a constant throughout Piri’s history. Juggling the roles of the mediator between communities and the warrior who defended these communities.
The tattoos served as an eternal reminder of Piri’s passions to uphold all these narratives. A reminder of his purpose to maintain the fine threads between peace and war.
HA! I REALLY CAME BACK FULL CIRCLE TO THE FLAG SYMBOLISM!
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Speaking of flag symbolism, allow me to end this brainrot essay on a funny note.
Imagine telling HWS Philippines that the sun on his flag was inspired by his ASS TATTS.
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Sources
Abbacan-Tuguic, Lalin, and Lunes Marnag. “Whatok (Tattooe): The Aesthetic Expression of Traditional Kalinga Beauty.” International Journal of Advanced Research in Management and Social Sciences 5, no. 6 (2016): 725-939. https://garph.co.uk/IJARMSS-vol5-no6.html. Bergaño, Diego. Vocabulary of the Kapampangan language in Spanish and dictionary of the Spanish language in Kapampangan: The English Translation of the Kapampangan-Spanish Dictionary. Translated by Fr. Venancio Q. Samson. Angeles City, Philippines: Holy Angel University Press, 2007. Boxer Codex: A Modern Spanish Transcription and English Translation of 16th-Century Exploration Accounts of East and Southeast Asia and the Pacific. Edited by Isaac Donoso. Translated by Ma. Luisa Garcia, Carlos Quirino, and Mauro García. Quezon City, Philippines: Vibal Foundation, Inc., 2016. Bramhall, Donna. “Exploring Kalinga culture, tattoo artistry, tribal traditions,” Rappler, July 9, 2016. https://www.rappler.com/life-and-style/138427-kalinga-culture-tribal-traditions-tatoos/. Calano, Mark Joseph. “Archiving bodies: Kalinga batek and the im/possibility of an archive.” Thesis Eleven 112, no. 1 (2012): 98-112. https://doi.org/10.1177%2F0725513612450502. Clariza, Ma. Elena. “Sacred Texts and Symbols: An Indigenous Filipino Perspective on Reading.” The International Journal of Information, Diversity, & Inclusion 3, no. 2 (2019): 80-92. https://doi.org/10.33137/ijidi.v3i2.32593. Cultural Center of the Philippines. “Tagbanwa.” Encyclopedia of Philippine Art. Accessed December 6, 2021. https://epa.culturalcenter.gov.ph/1/2/2374/. De Las Peñas, Ma. Louise Antonette N., and Analayn Salvador-Amores. “Enigmatic Geometric Tattoos of the Butbut of Kalinga, Philippines.” The Mathematical Intelligencer 41, no. 1 (2019): 31-38. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00283-018-09864-6. Garlitos, Rhandee. “Great Elder.” Panyaan: Three Tales of the Tagbanua. Accessed Dec 7, 2021. https://www.canvas.ph/catalog/panyaan-three-tales-of-the-tagbanua. Hoskins, Janet. “Introduction: Headhunting as Practice and as Trope.” In Headhunting and the Social Imagination in Southeast Asia, edited by Janet Hoskins, 1-49. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press, 1996. Krutak, Lars. “The Last Kalinga Tattoo Artist of the Philippines.” Lars Krutak: Tattoo Anthropologist (blog). WordPress. May 30, 2013. https://www.larskrutak.com/the-last-kalinga-tattoo-artist-of-the-philippines/. Miyamoto, Masaru. 1988. “The Hanunoo-Mangyan: Society, Religion and Law among a Mountain People of Mindoro Island, Philippines.” Senri Ethnological Studies, vol. 22. Osaka: National Museum of Ethnology. Ocampo, Ambeth R. “Who owns Whang-Od and her tattoos?,” Philippine Daily Inquirer, August 11, 2021. https://opinion.inquirer.net/142977/who-owns-whang-od-and-her-tattoos. —. “Heritage: More heat than light,” Philippine Daily Inquirer, August 13, 2021. https://opinion.inquirer.net/143039/heritage-more-heat-than-light. Pagador, Renan. “The Philippine Scripts.” Baybayin Archives (blog). Blogspot. August 26, 2020. http://rapcom-archives.blogspot.com/2020/08/. Ragragio, Andrea Malaya D., and Myfel D. Paluga. “An Ethnography of Pantaron Manobo Tattooing (Pangotoeb): Towards a Heuristic Schema in Understanding Manobo Indigenous Tattoos.” Southeast Asian Studies 8, no. 2 (2019): 259-294. https://doi.org/10.20495/seas.8.2_259. Rosales, Christian A. “Sorcery, Rights, and Cosmopolitics Among the Tau-Buhid Mangyan in Mts. Iglit-Baco National Park.” Aghamtao 27, no. 1 (2019): 110-159. Salvador-Amores, Analyn “Batek: Tradition Tattoos and Identities in Contemporary Kalinga, North Luzon Philippines.” Humanities Diliman 3, no. 1 (2002): 105-142. https://journals.upd.edu.ph/index.php/humanitiesdiliman/article/view/32. —. “Batok (Traditional Tattoos) in Diaspora: The Reinvention of a Globally Mediated Kalinga Identity.” South East Asia Research 19, no. 2 (2011): 293–318. http://www.jstor.org/stable/23750924.
—. “Burik: Tattoos of the Ibaloy Mummies of Benguet, North Luzon, Philippines.” In Ancient Ink: The Archaeology of Tattooing, edited by Lars Krutak and Aaron Deter-Wolf, 37-55. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2017. —. “Re-examining Igorot representation: issues of commodification and cultural appropriation.” South East Asia Research 28, no. 4 (2020): 380-396. https://doi.org/10.1080/0967828X.2020.1843369. Scott, William Henry. Barangay: Sixteenth-Century Philippine Culture and Society. Quezon City, Philippines: Ateneo de Manila University Press, 1994. “Visayan Tattoo Design.” Akopito (blog). Weebly. February 18, 2014. http://akopito.weebly.com/blog-naacutekocirc/visayan-tattoo-design.
Final Note
While they were interconnected, the emphasis of my headcanon was on tattoos as (national) memory over tattoos as (national) identity. I know it's paradoxical of me to separate them but it did make you think twice about what built identity. What built character! It's a question I cannot answer through one headcanon or one comic even. ☼ BANAAG ☼ would be my attempt at a personal answer to that question.
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empiressmpheadcanon · 2 years
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📂📂📂
shubble likes to embroider!!
gem has royal tatoos
gems dress has lots of intricate golden embroidery on it (intricate clothes are a sign of wealth and power in Dawn)
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magnoliamyrrh · 1 year
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this is a stupid question but i've been wanting to get one of those traditional croatian tattoos on one of my arms for years even if i'm not croatian nor a christian. on my other arm i want a traditional romanian embroidery pattern (bc i'm actually romanian). what's holding me back is that i don't wanna offend anyone since i'm not from one of the east euro countries that practiced that tradition (afaik we've never had that here). anyways do you think it'd be a bad idea or not lmao
good question bc ive been contemplating the same thing for years fjdjdj. so
tattooing is something we had in the region; the dacians used to tattoo, including their faces, and so did the thracians, who the dacians may or may not come from. so its not a foreign practice to us by any means - i think you can definitely get tatoos of romanian motifs without it being any sort of problem, its something ive wanted to do too for a long time. as far as those croatian tattoos go, from what ive been able to find online, they werent practiced exclusively among catholic and croatian women, rather they were more widespread around the people of croatia/bosnia/yugoslavia etc. its unclear from what i can find if the origin is celtic or slavic, but either way, both of those cultures have certainly had an impact on ours as well historically.
among christian balkan, in this case particularly croatian, women these tattoos, and their survival in practice, was directly related to trying to keep the ottomans from kidnapping women and girls and forcibly converting them to islam - something which was a struggle in romania as well; this is why some of the tattoos have christian symbols, to remind the girls and women of their faith. and i do think its important to read up on this history and part of it, even though this wasnt their only and sole use and presence, and to take it into consideration. from what i gather, for many croatian women there tattoos are a point of pride, but also come from a painful history.
now. ive said before lol that i dont think cultural appropriation exists in the balkans and i think its kind of stupid for it to. in this particular context too, there is no power dynamic, as far as i know from history romania and croatia havent had a history of conflicts, in fact we have a history of pacts.;;; in the balkans we have all throughout history migrated, mixed, intermarriage, adopted each others cultures, traditions, religions, practices, etc. weve been doing this for thousands of years. personally, i think this is one of the beautiful things about the balkans; and im a pan-balkanist so im all about trying to get everyone in the balkans together and getting rid of the idea that were all separate neat little distinct ppl; we have a lot more in common than we have in difference. the idea of pure cultures or clear cut cultures around here is just unrealistic, its not based in history, and also, talking abt cultural appropriation in the balkans just sounds like woke nationalism
im not croatian neither catholic so, u know, my opinion only goes so far but. i reckon if it comes from a place of respect and understanding its not that big of an issue - hell you can probably go to croatia and get them done. if you live in romania i severly doubt anyone will give a shit, if you live in the west i severly doubt anyone will give a shit bc the westerners tend to know next to nothing about our cultures and they rarely can tell us apart anyway. i dont think its a particularly bad idea 🤷‍♀️
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lust-is-blindness · 4 years
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jsarloutte · 5 years
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Merci @yoshikar pour ce magnifique tatouage ❤️❤️❤️ Je l'adore ! . . . #juliesarloutte #yoshikar #yosoparis #tatoo #tatouage #tattoo #tattoos #flowers #hummingbird #hummingbirdtattoo #flowertattoo #broderie #embroidery #brodado #colibris https://www.instagram.com/p/B4mNvKcowm2/?igshid=lxpszx2w1856
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kkmobilefotografy · 6 years
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#ornaments #tatoo #design #inspiration two in one - equal equals. I can see so many things here, can You see them too? #photography #photographer #nature #trees #naturekingdom #bestfriendgoals #fashion is my #passion #workhardplayhard #fashiondesigner #discovery #nationalgeographic #menswear #embroidery #morning have a nice day to all of Ya. #📸 #Niego (at United Kingdom)
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amethystasiya · 3 years
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Made her just for relax. Made from fleece. Hand embroidery tatoos).She is for sale. Do you like it?🤩
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iradizainer · 5 months
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the-fashion-dish · 7 years
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Reem Acra Fall 2017 Ready-to-Wear
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ran196242 · 4 years
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For the ask me stuff 5 6 8 17 36 37 52 84 134 please and thank you!
Tattoos and piercing i want Sexual orientation 5. 4 turn ons
Im gonna go with aesthetic turn-ons because i dont feel that way towards anyone so: 
- Food. Seeing good looking food makes me happy and excited.
- Fabric details on clothes (embroidery, gradient, the stitches etc..)
- Soft voices. I hate loudness when not necessary. 
- Beautiful art. Esp ones with very vibrant colors and good compositions.
6. 4 turns off
- Chewing noises. I hate chewing noises. 
- “You’re a woman/girl you should have long hair/dress like this/ act like that...” fuck you i do what i want as long as i never harm people.
- Noises. I hate noisy places. Would not want to be in crowded places that are not somewhere I want to be either.
- Too much light exposure/sunlight. If you have all the lights turn on in the early morning, i would go and turn them all off. I also hate being under direct sunlight because i cant see anything and it’s hot and i hate everything about a sunny day.
8.  Sexual orientation
I’m asexual. But i like to look and admire anyone, regardless of their gender and their orientation. 
17. Favourite food
Too hard to choose for a foodie like me. But from my blog you can see that i like donuts to the point i use them as a pun.
 36. Tattoos and piercing i have
I have neither of them.
 37. Tattoos and piercing i want
I want a tiny Chocopie tatoo somewhere like on my shoulder? I dunno, I don’t want to have lasting commitment to a tat, but maybe i should have ear piercings for wearing some earrings i want in the future.
 52.  When was the last time I hugged someone?
I forgot. Hugging isn’t the norm in my country either.
 84. I accidentally eat some radioactive vegetables. They were good, and what’s even cooler is that they endow me with the super-power of my choice! What is that power?
Probably the ability to not feel like i wanna die everyday anymore. 
134. What do I want for birthday?
Peace. No fights for one day. Maybe a smaller graphic monitor to carry around for drawing hangouts with my friends so my current one doesn’t have the chance to throw me down the stairs like back in 2018 and made me wobbled around for months. 
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toukatan · 5 years
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Do you have any ideas on how they would introduce mikasa's symbol in s4 ? Cause in the anime she didn't have the tatoo but instead that embroidery pattern.. and it appears to be an imp plot point so the anime won't discard her asian heritage like that and kiyomi's shady ass will be even more relevant later on
i’m actually very curious to know how as well because within the anime we barely see mikasa’s wrists because they’re covered by her uniform. even when her wrists are exposed there’s nothing actually there.
in the manga we know there’s something there and obviously it’s her clan marking revealed in chapter 107.
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with saying that, this is timeskipped forward so it would and should be animated. but with the anime flashback that whole concept of her marking is ignored by the adaptation but we know what they left out
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i wouldn’t be too surprised if the anime team just threw this flashback in, in order to make the storyline line up to when we get mikasa meeting kiyomi.
but i did notice that within the second seasons opening mikasa is seen staring at her right wrist intensely. like the whole background is blurred with the focual point being her fist and wrist. (yes it could literally just be showing strength but just the way the angle is focused has me questioning)
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they possibly could’ve changed the location of the marking which i find personally a very smooth move— that’s the only thing i can think of really, them moving the marking into her inner wrist if they were to stick with the manga’s storyline. i also noticed when it comes to offical art mikasa’s right arm is placed very strategically placed here are some examples:
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inner wrist covered of facing a certain direction. though in saying that there are some offical works that do show her inner wrist and no mark appears to be there.
so that’s all i can come up with. the animation team moving her clan making to her inner wrist instead of having it on the other side (which is more exposed) like the manga or they’ll completely remove the idea of her clan marking but have the concept of hizuru there.
i hope they don’t remove this part of the storyline, they can catch my hands if they do. i’m genuinely interested in this part of mikasa’s story, like i have a need to learn more about her heritage, even if kiyomi sounds suspicious right now i wanna know more about mikasa!
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gloriousmonsters · 4 years
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re: tmg tattoo, maybe a lit match with "find where the heat's unbearable" above and "and stay there if you have to" below from Spent Gladiator 1? i dont design tattoos, but I do design embroidery, and I've been planning on something like that
okay so somehow i listened to most of Transcendental Youth in the past while somehow missing Spent Galdiator 1, so thank you for bringing it to my attention, it’s a new favorite! (My process of listening to TMG songs is a meandering, twisty process known only to the stars and sages. it makes no sense.) and I do love the idea of designing a tattoo off it, especially since it straight up mentions tattoos---although I’m also tempted/interested by the lyrics ‘don’t hurt anybody on your way up to the light’ and ‘i am happy where the vermin play’ 
re your reply on the post in all seriousness I’ve considered an Autoclave tat as well (I listened to it on the day I got my first kiss, which I had HELLA mixed feelings about and led eventually to figuring out I was aro; plus it resonates with a lot of other stuff, so... important one for me) but if I did it I’d probably do the throne of skulls itself
(i’ve also had some vague ideas about hebrews 11:40, best ever death metal band out of denton, maybe sprout wings)
honestly what I’m already looking at is that with tmg songs alone I’ll be getting tatoos for quite some time whenever it’s possible, and that’s not even getting into radical face songs 
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| You Are Art |
By @ignaciajullian on instagram
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jsarloutte · 6 years
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"Mais je me suis réveillée " peinture à l'aiguille, 19x27 cm #juliesarloutte #broderie #embroidery #needlepainting #peinturealaiguille #fibreart #needlework #art #artcontemporain #contemporaryart #france#peinturesursoie #silkpainting #lovers #coloré #couleur #color #kiss #baisé #love #tatoo #tatouage
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