Bike Forums

Bike Forums (https://www.bikeforums.net/forum.php)
-   General Cycling Discussion (https://www.bikeforums.net/general-cycling-discussion/)
-   -   Tattoos and cyclists (https://www.bikeforums.net/general-cycling-discussion/1115131-tattoos-cyclists.html)

FBOATSB 07-21-17 09:04 AM


Originally Posted by mstateglfr (Post 19734896)


I am not trying to argue, simply understand. This is an incredibly interesting thread to me and I have enjoyed all the opinions and examples from differing viewpoints and demographics of society.

+1. I have managed to go 61 years without ink, although many scars. I have a very good friend who has a life time collection of tatoos and still getting more every year. He is currently undergoing treatment for Hep-C and he thinks it might be related.

1WheelMax 07-21-17 09:12 AM

I'm tattooed from my left ankle, up my leg to my entire back, and over to my left shoulder down to about an inch above my left elbow. Also several others on the other side.

WizardOfBoz 07-21-17 09:48 AM


Originally Posted by indyfabz (Post 19734689)

Nailed it...

mconlonx 07-21-17 10:12 AM

I never got a tattoo because I could never think of anything I wanted to get. It had to be meaningful, man... At age 37 I got my first, it was small and I liked it a lot. Then another. And another. And so on. They all seemed to get bigger with every next one. So far, I am tattooed from one shoulder blade, around my chest, to the other one, and down my upper arms. None show even in a t-shirt, but I do have an ex-wife's initials tattooed on my ring finger.

They are all meaningful to me, but some not in any particularly conscious way. I like them. My partner likes them. She got a couple more, and I'm currently planning on a few bigger pieces -- one would be visible down an arm, another would be a succession of bits inspired by the art of Takashi Murakami, from foot to hand. Thinking maybe a huge Galactus backpiece.

Love to see people with tattoos, especially women.

I do not regret any of them. They are permanent mementos. While they sting going down, pain is forgotten and the image remains. I like tattoo art style and there are some amazing artists practicing the trade. Most reputable shops operate with sterile tek regarding ink, guns, needles, etc.

Plan is to keep getting more, and hopefully die with most skin covered. I'll probably save facial tattoos until after I retire... Visible tattoos, especially on hands and head, are called "job-killers" but I'm not sure I'd want a job where such markings would make a difference.

I'm curious about all those who say they are tacky, or ruin the aesthetics of a human body, or look like graffiti, etc. -- how many of them would otherwise buy into the notion that beauty is more than skin-deep? How many would overlook scars, disease, or deformation of human form in some other way, but denigrate tattoos and those who have them? I don't fault anyone for not having tattoos, certainly, and I wouldn't expect anyone to fault me for mine...

TenSpeedV2 07-21-17 10:39 AM


Originally Posted by mconlonx (Post 19735193)

I'm curious about all those who say they are tacky, or ruin the aesthetics of a human body, or look like graffiti, etc. -- how many of them would otherwise buy into the notion that beauty is more than skin-deep? How many would overlook scars, disease, or deformation of human form in some other way, but denigrate tattoos and those who have them? I don't fault anyone for not having tattoos, certainly, and I wouldn't expect anyone to fault me for mine...

I like how you think. :)

I have half a sleeve on one arm, and a small memorial on the inside of my other arm in memorial of my Mom passing away. I have never once looked at that memorial and thought it was tacky. The font of the writing is almost exactly in her handwriting so it has a lot of meaning for me.

indyfabz 07-21-17 11:01 AM


Originally Posted by WizardOfBoz (Post 19735131)
Nailed it...

In case you can't read the fine print, that's (Darryl) Hall & (John) Oates. I am from Philly, and they are local boys. They still play in the area (just did this summer) and are wildly popular, but not in my book.


Oates has gotten odder looking as the years have progressed.


https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikiped...phy-_1_jpg.jpg

TimothyH 07-21-17 11:12 AM

Beauty is certainly more than skin deep. True beauty is hidden and no one knows how valuable anyone else' soul is to God.

Whether tattoos are a willful and purposeful disfigurement of the human body can be legitimately debated but they are not the same as scars, disease and genetic or accidental deformation. One does not choose these. They are not something one does to themselves by choice. Tattoos are done by choice.

To somehow equate tattoos with scars and disease is a complete insult to those who have scars and disease. One does not choose Leukemia or to get in a car wreck and lose a limb.

Saying that I don't like the way tattoos look is not the same as saying that someone with tattoos is a bad person. Tattoos happen to disgust me but there will likely be many people in heaven who have had tattoos in their earthly lives and I would not turn away a fireman with tattoos who wants to carry me out of a burning building. At the same time however, it isn't wrong for me to see someone with pot leaves and F.U. tattooed on their forehead and draw conclusions about whether they are the kind of person I want dating my daughter.


-Tim-

InOmaha 07-21-17 11:16 AM


Originally Posted by memebag (Post 19734937)
Yes, it's vital that women constantly keep men's opinions first and foremost in their decisions. Especially men they don't even know. Especially attractive women. They have a duty to please us.



Yes, says the entire fashion world. Just look at any magazine geared towards women. They don't wear uncomfortable high heals, make up, all sorts of uncomfortable clothes for themselves. And they typically (well most) don't dress up for other women. Yet surprisingly, their harshest fashion critics are typically other women.


I'm not against tattoos, but they aren't my thing. I take photographs to remember. If tattoos cover a large area, I like those that are well done and one theme, rather then a series of smaller random tattoos squeezed together into wherever they fit until there's no room left. Face, neck, and hand tattoos are distracting and do count against you in most business settings. So that's likely why the professional racers don't have as many visible tattoos. Advertisers want their logos to stand out and tattoos might distract from a potential sponsor's ads. In that case, you have to be really, really good not to be passed over in favor of one of the thousands of others at the same level they cut on a regular basis.


The sad truth is if there are two equal bike riders and I had to pick which one I wanted to sponsor, it would be the clean slate. Then I'd dress him in what amounts to a full corporate logo tattoo.

The Full Monty 07-21-17 12:04 PM

You guys come up with the strangest things to discuss on this board lol.

WizardOfBoz 07-21-17 12:08 PM


Originally Posted by indyfabz (Post 19735336)
In case you can't read the fine print, that's (Darryl) Hall & (John) Oates. I am from Philly, and they are local boys. They still play in the area (just did this summer) and are wildly popular, but not in my book.

Oates has gotten odder looking as the years have progressed.

I went out and tracked down some Hall and Oates stuff on Youtube. Definitely 80s, but very good 80s. Then I caught Darius Rucker guesting on Darryl Hall's show. We're kind of going down the youtube rabbit hole here, but if you like "Hootie", check him out sans Blowfish, with Darryl. What a voice.


Stratocaster 07-21-17 12:13 PM


Originally Posted by indyfabz (Post 19734689)





I used to own one of these! :lol:

...:foo: Hey, wait a minute!!!

Milton Keynes 07-21-17 12:23 PM


Originally Posted by beechnutC23 (Post 19726067)
Personally I'm no fan of tattoos, and I find them particularly a turn-off on women. I've seen women with bodies that are themselves a work of art without the tattoos. Why, why why?

It's like putting a bumper sticker on a Rolls-Royce, innit?

Stratocaster 07-21-17 12:43 PM


Originally Posted by mstateglfr (Post 19734896)
Basically- are all common displayed expressions of self considered trite to you, or is it specific to tattoos?




Nope. Poetry, song writing, and painting are all acceptable forms of self expression. :innocent:

:lol:

Milton Keynes 07-21-17 12:47 PM

http://www.tattoo.com/sites/default/...rt-nothing.jpg

indyfabz 07-21-17 12:50 PM


Originally Posted by WizardOfBoz (Post 19735544)
I went out and tracked down some Hall and Oates stuff on Youtube.


"She's Gone" and "Sarah Smile" are the only two songs I really like. "Rich Girl" is tolerable. My favorite thing about that song is that it gave me an excuse to say "*****" when I was young. "But mom! Those are the song's words!"

canklecat 07-21-17 02:10 PM

1 Attachment(s)

Originally Posted by memebag (Post 19734937)
Yes, it's vital that women constantly keep men's opinions first and foremost in their decisions. Especially men they don't even know. Especially attractive women. They have a duty to please us.

:thumb:

canklecat 07-21-17 02:13 PM

John Oates just ain't the same without that fabulous '70s pr0n star 'stache.

He should have that mustache tattooed on.

memebag 07-21-17 02:58 PM

Daryl Hall wants all deer dead because they gave him Lyme disease.

Fastfingaz 07-21-17 02:59 PM


Originally Posted by europa (Post 19726774)
I often have a chainring tat on my calf, but washes off... eventually

Yeah it washes off but that ball n chain is right back there when you get home,, hahaha,,,,

shelbyfv 07-21-17 03:03 PM

My Google skills have failed me, but I seem to remember that there was once an acknowledged limit to the number of affectations permitted a man. Was it only one or was it two? Facial hair, tattoo, a self conscious "hairstyle" such as bun, ponytail or shaved, walking stick or umbrella, pipe.... And maybe what is recognized as an affectation may change with generations? In the 50's facial hair would be "making a statement" and thus affected, but wearing a hat with your suit would have seemed normal. Situation would be reversed today. I guess the bottom line is that when trying to attract attention you have to know your audience and accept that some part of the population will view you as a joke.

rachel120 07-21-17 03:39 PM


Originally Posted by TimothyH (Post 19735378)
Whether tattoos are a willful and purposeful disfigurement of the human body can be legitimately debated but they are not the same as scars, disease and genetic or accidental deformation. One does not choose these. They are not something one does to themselves by choice. Tattoos are done by choice.

A lot of my scars were by choice. How can those scars (around 30 visible ones) be not that big of a deal but my husband's name is disfigurement?

Jon T 07-21-17 03:41 PM

Personally I can't stand tats and think they're as ugly as sin. My daughter and worthless BF have more ink than skin. It's really disgusting.
Jon

wipekitty 07-21-17 04:02 PM


Originally Posted by Hardrock23 (Post 19733980)
I'm a woman with 7 tattoos and they are visible. I plan to get more eventually. I'm not at all worried about what they will look like when I am older. It is something I considered at first, but in the end it just didn't matter.

Thank you for sharing this. I'm similar: half sleeve, five medium size pieces, a quote in an Indo-European ancient language that I in fact read fluently, and my first relatively small upper back tattoo. My two main artists are actual artists (one has a BFA in art), and their shop is insanely clean, licensed through the county health department, and has never had a violation.

Maybe my tattoos are trashy. I find Botox, permanent makeup, plastic surgery, and faketan to be no less trashy. The thing is that it all looks bad when you're 80 - but, God willing, I'll be looking bad while riding centuries on a 'bent! :D


Originally Posted by mconlonx (Post 19735193)
At age 37 I got my first, it was small and I liked it a lot. Then another. And another. And so on. They all seemed to get bigger with every next one.

Nice. My husband is similar: started at 38, and kind of went all out. I think it was my fault.

Hardrock23 07-21-17 11:39 PM


Originally Posted by wipekitty (Post 19736059)
Thank you for sharing this. I'm similar: half sleeve, five medium size pieces, a quote in an Indo-European ancient language that I in fact read fluently, and my first relatively small upper back tattoo. My two main artists are actual artists (one has a BFA in art), and their shop is insanely clean, licensed through the county health department, and has never had a violation.

Maybe my tattoos are trashy. I find Botox, permanent makeup, plastic surgery, and faketan to be no less trashy. The thing is that it all looks bad when you're 80 - but, God willing, I'll be looking bad while riding centuries on a 'bent! :D

:thumb:


I'm working towards a sleeve...though it's been really slow going as most of my cash the past couple years has gone to my bikes instead lol. I'll get there eventually...so far, there are 6 between both arms & hands.




It is interesting to read the different views people have on tattoos. I really like the ones that are women-specific though...

leicanthrope 07-22-17 12:04 AM


Originally Posted by wgscott (Post 19727233)
Perhaps being stuffed into over-tight lycra and spandex screams out "I am white trash" sufficiently to the world.

But I thought that the lycra made us effete *****exuals who aspire to be Lance Armstrong?


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 02:27 AM.


Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.