flowers.
As far as house plants go, orchids, if taken care of properly, are among the longest-lasting (and, if you ask most tastemakers, the prettiest, too). Get one that lasts forever.
Succulents, too, carry on seemingly endless lives. This minimalist tattoo piece—which belongs to and was designed by Best Life editor Ashley Moor—is an example of how to design them right.
Cut out the flowers but stick with the greenery. Wrap your wrist, forearm, or even your entire thigh with some nimble, elegant vines.
The contemplative nature of the willow tree is fit for a contemplative soul—and its accompanying simple tattoo.
"You won't be able to go to the beach for two weeks after you get your tattoo," says Jones. Excess exposure to sun and sand can cause irreparable damage to your skin—or worse: the artwork. However, this doesn't mean that a cool tattoo like this one can't evoke a bit of that breezy nature in your day-to-day life.
"Color tends to be more harsh on the skin, because the ink has to be well-saturated," says Thornhill. In other words: More needlework than a traditional black-ink tattoo requires.
If you're going to get a colored tattoo, consider going for a design done up in the watercolor style that's all the rage these days. When your tattoo fades—and make no mistake, it will—muted, splashy ink tends to age better than more vividly colored pieces.
"Many people these days don't realize that most artists have a book full of original designs they've drawn—and want to tattoo," says Jones. "Pick an artist whose style you like. Then, choose from their book. That way, you'll have something special that no one else has."
Another fount of inspiration from nature: the animal kingdom. "The first step is having the idea," says Thornhill. "If you've made it to the shop and are having trouble thinking what to get, the artists can help you out. We'll ask clients what means the most to them and where they're thinking of getting the tattoo. Then, we work our magic to design something special they can enjoy—forever."
Something along the lines of this fierce wolf—which was meticulously done up by Dan Bythewood, at New York Adorned—courtesy of our colleague, Tyler Stewart, is a great way to pay homage to man's best friend's Darwinian ancestor.
Human relationships might wax and wane, but a dog's love stays the same. Memorialize your pup. (Also, speaking from personal experience—the design above, by the artist Ok, is Morgan's—having a dog tattoo is an excellent conversation starter.)
Align yourself with Best Life's official stance on the cats versus dogs debate.
Getting a paw print is an abstract way to commemorate your furriest, sweetest family member.
Float like one of these.
Or sting like one of these. (Though not as much as, you know, getting a tattoo.)
You'll see a whole lot of these simple tattoos at Coachella and Burning Man.
Some consider bird tattoos basic. But if you buck trends and get a stylized, geometric design, your bird will be anything but.
C'mon. Everyone loves chocolate.
Yes, you can have your cake and eat it too. (You'll have to provide the edible version yourself, though.)
With a cherry on top.
Not all cool tattoos have to have meaning, says Jones, but "some people prefer meaningful tattoos!" If you grew up in, say, New York City, a bagel is one way to carry your hometown with you no matter where you go in life.
Or, get even more literal: A city skyline tattoo pays homage to the city where it all started—and first-timers will be happy to learn that a design like this simple outline tattoo doesn't require more than an hour under the gun, at the absolute most.
A recent trend in tattooing is opting to get an outline of your home state. That way, you can wait and ruminate; if you want to fill it in at a later date—with coloring, topography, roadways, townships, geometric design, or even just all-black shading—you can. Or, you can leave it as the sparse piece of art it is.
The coordinates of a special place, says Jones, rank among the most common first-time tattoo requests at Red Rocket. You know: something like the exact location of your birthplace, or your kid's birthplace.
You could also go macro.
Really macro.
Any tattoo you get can serve as an anchor to an eventually larger, more elaborate piece. Take this crescent moon, for example. It was a launching pad for a sleeve done by three separate artists—mostly by Nicolas Gualteros, at Sena Tattoo—and is a prime example of how you can blend more than one style into something inimitably unique.
Often, tattoo artists and studios will offer "flash tattoos" in one-day events. A flash tattoo is a pre-designed, pre-priced piece of art that's available on a walk-in, first-come-first-serve basis. They're generally small, and generally require less than an hour of work—hence, flash. The magical take on Jupiter above (Ari's), done by Baris Yesilbas, at Gristle Tattoo in Brooklyn, is one such flash tattoo.
If it's good enough for our solar system to revolve around it, then it's good enough to earn a place on your skin.
Extremely macro.
Starlight, star bright, this could be the first tattoo you get tonight. (You'd be following in the footsteps of Dorothy Parker, who had a clandestine tiny blue star on the inside of her bicep.)
Carry with you a healthy reminder that, no matter what you're feeling or facing, existence is vast.
One thing you can guarantee will never change is your zodiac sign.
Or, just capture the celestial essence of the universe in its entirety with a sleek and simple infinity sign.
There's no shame in letting the world know about your fondness for history's most notably frizzly physicist.
Maybe it's the date of your wedding anniversary. Maybe it's the day your first child was born. Or maybe it's April 27, 2018 (the day Avengers: Infinity War hit theaters, for those who somehow haven't committed the occasion to memory). Whichever day you choose, remember that you're going to see it on all of the other days of your life, so it should be of seismically life-changing importance, like those three examples.
One idea: find out the exact time you were born and memorialize the importance of your whole being. (Your birth certificate should have the info you're looking for.)
Consider getting that time in analog. It's a timeless style!
Yes, all time-tested, circle-shaped tools of the trade work just as well as tattoos as they do in real life.
Pirate-skull-and-crossbones: out. The vessels pirates road in on: in.
And no, we aren't referring to the how-did-this-get-popular Awolnation song. (Though, yes, people have gotten that tattooed.)
Fans of stories like The Great Gatsby or Bioshock Infinite can show their appreciation for landmark works of fiction with a well-designed, minimalist lighthouse.
Like Thomas Jefferson once said: "The boisterous sea of liberty is never without a wave."
The ne plus ultra of nautical-inspired tattoos. (And this piece is proof that, yes, some artists will tattoo your hand.)
Though common, seashell tattoos are actually quite poetic. A real seashell serves to protect the marine mollusk that takes shelter in it, and so a tattoo of one can symbolize your fortitude and tenacity. Or, it can quite literally just mean that you really like going to the beach.
Fun fact: Starfish are technically living creatures, but they have no brain—and no blood.
In the midst of midwinter blizzards, let your lobster tattoo take you back to sunny Saturdays on the beach—toes in the sand (and a lobster roll in your hand).
If you're in the mindset for an aquatic tattoo, you'll find few shapes more graceful than the willowy wisps of a Siamese fighting fish.
Double down on a trend and double up.
Red is well-known as the most, um, carnally evocative color. (A recent study by OkCupid found that men and women who wear red received more messages than those who wear any other color.)
For more ideas on wacky fish to tattoo, check out this scary inspiration.
(See what we did there?)
"When it comes to writing, just make sure it's [in a] clear and legible [font]," says Thornhill. To browse typefaces, check out dafont.com. It's an invaluable database, full of nearly 40,000 free fonts to choose from.
The most unique font of all, though, is personal handwriting. An example: Our colleague, Madeline Purdue, got a note from her grandmother permanently etched on her side. It's a carbon copy and permanently etched memory of the card she received from Nana for her 18th birthday—the last birthday card.
From your favorite novel, poem, song—whatever!
We're partial to the mild intricacy and simple elegance of the ampersand.
Semicolon tattoos have gained popularity over the years as a symbol of hope and perseverance for people struggling with mental illness. "A semicolon represents a sentence the author could have ended, but chose not to," explain the folks at Project Semicolon. "The sentence is your life and the author is you."
"We get a lot of matching tattoo [requests] between family members and friends, which is always cute," says Jones. It also works for couples, too.
As a piece of art, it works equally well either broken, intact, or anywhere in between.
No, fellow editors, we didn't forget an entry here. ("TK," for those not in the know, is writer-ese for "to come," as in, "text to come.") If you're wondering why the skin in this picture looks so raw, by the way, it's because Morgan got the simple tattoo while we were in the middle of writing.
Diehard fans of Rent know this number (and phrase) by heart.
One idea: If your team ever won a Super Bowl, get that.
There are 118 elements on the periodic table, each with its own intricate structure. Choose one.
Or combine a bunch. Pick a compound that means a lot to you—if you're a painter, for instance, maybe you'd get the chemical compound for paint—and spring for that.
"I [recently] did Deadpool riding a unicorn," says Rusty Thornhill. "That was really fun."
Assemble!
But not one you need.
Choose the light side or the dark side—or both!
Even if you missed the Game Boy games or trading cards of late-'90s elementary school, there's a good bet you've played some iteration of the game. After all, Pokémon Go has been downloaded nearly half a billion times, and, after its 2016 release, topped both the iTunes and Google Play app stores for months on end.
For those unaware, the Master Ball is to Poké Balls as what the lion is to the jungle: King.
With more than 800 Pokémon in the Pokédex, you're bound to find one that's the best there ever was. (The correct answer: Jolteon.)
Of all the mythical creatures, few are more majestic or mighty than the Charizard dragon.
"A Lannister always pays his debts."
A minimalistic homage to a body of fiction that inspired millions of lives (and still regularly draws real-world comparisons on social media to this day).
Few experiences are more transformative than your first flight in a window seat, looking at topographical expanse at 35,000 feet.
The view from the outside ain't bad, either.
Especially if you're flying over the Rockies.
No, she didn't technically exist—but she was a tectonically powerful icon nonetheless.
Think of your favorite tune, track down the sheet music of your favorite part, and get it permanently etched.
Hey, you'll need something to broadcast that favorite tune of yours.
Though you may want to keep it to yourself…
The beat of the music is one thing. The beat of you is another (better) thing.
Traveling tattooer Georgie Williams custom-designs individual pieces in his unique, high-tech, machine-inspired, Tron-like style.
CHOTATTOOER, who travels from time-to-time but is based out of Temperance Tattoo, in San Francisco, offers a one-of-a-kind style: bright, bold, beautiful, and saturated to the point of no return.
The rich, moody sleeves from Ryan Flaherty, whose home base is Pioneer Tattoo, in Chicago, are the type of artworks you'd expect to see enmeshed in a high-quality frame—only, instead of brushed brass, the frame is your skin.
The modern, deconstructed pinups from Diana Felix are among the only tattoos of the type (sultry, scandalous) with such inimitable class.
We've all had fun on Ferris wheels. Let a Ferris wheel have fun on you.
Same goes for merry-go-rounds.
Or 99.
You know what they say: every snowflake is 100 percent unique.
So get a bunch of them!
From Mary Poppins to Galahad from Kingsman, you can't go wrong with this timeless accessory.
Sometimes, companies offer a literal tit-for-tat. If you get their logo inked, you get free stuff. For instance, the folks at &pizza offered free pizza for a year for the first 20 or so people to show up at a new store's opening—if they got the tattoo. (That &pizza's logo is an ampersand, a design we're, again, enamored with, makes the decision here kind of a no-brainer.)
For an incredibly niche joke, get it inked on your knee.
You'll feel free as a bird.
Can't go wrong with a classic.
But you can update it for equality-minded 21st-century life.
Well, look at that. It turns out you can make "till death do us part" as permanent as a tattoo (or a pair of tattoos).
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