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Looking After Your New Tattoo

By: James Beckett

You are probably in the minority if you are going to go ahead with the decision to get that tattoo because a lot of people get scared off by the process. Lack of knowledge is probably the biggest culprit for this happening because the fear of getting a tattoo that ends up as a health nightmare of lack of awareness how to live with a tattoo after you get one runs off a lot of potential body art lovers. And when you add to that a media perception of tattoo artists as unsavory characters who operate dirty, back alley operations is far too common and radically incorrect. To start with finding out that tattooists are professionals like anyone else helps a lot. They want your tattoo experience to be healthy and successful as much as you do.

This is not to say that there has never been a tattoo artist that didn't conduct himself in a sanitary way. There are bad elements in any business. So the first step of taking care of a tattoo is to be discriminating in who you use to put the tattoo on you. Make sure they are running a good business that has been there a while and is in good standing with the community. Get references and then go and check them out yourself. If you look at their facilities for giving you a tattoo and you are not convinced they will take care to apply the tattoo in a safe fashion, just keep looking.

The tattoo artists should put your health at a high priority which will be reflected in three things you will get from them while getting the tattoo. First, they will use a reliable ointment that is antiseptic throughout the process to keep your skin clean and free of infection. Second, the post application process will include additional cleaning and a bandage on the tattoo to help your body heal from the needle work. Finally the tattoo artist should be the first one to teach you how to take care of the tattoo when you get home.

You are going to have the instinct to wash the tattoo area as though it is dirty. After the tattoo process. If the tattooist did all of the steps properly, your tattoo may be the cleanest part of your body at that point. It is good to keep it clean, obviously and change the covering frequently but the tattoo should remain dry for several days to avoid any chances of infections or other problems. As soon as there is no chance of infection related fluids and the ink is dry enough to not smudge, you should go without the bandage sometimes to let your skin breathe and recover.

Your tattooist should be available to help you wish questions even after you have paid him for the tattoo and he can guide you on the right medicated ointments to buy for the important few days and weeks after the initial application of the tattoo. Most of what you will need can be found at the local drug store so it shouldn't be a big expense. Just be sure to be faithful to use the ointments he has you buy and avoid using harsh soaps on the tattoos area because the skin is still very tender and recovering from the tattoo.

After you finish the first week or two applying the ointments your tattooist recommends, the recovery time is not over. You should get a stock of good gentle lotions that have no perfumes or additives to keep the skin moist as the healing continues. Don't be shy to shop the baby supply aisle at the supermarket for a gentle lotion to use for this purpose because if that lotion is good enough for a baby's bottom, it's good enough for the skin of your tattoo area.

The final step of healing will be phase that may be the hardest for you of all of them but you have to be ready for it so you preserve the beauty of the tattoo you have worked so hard to get. When the tattoo area develops scabs, you will feel an instinct to work on them with your fingers. Resist that instinct because allowing the skin to heal as it already knows how to do will sure you don't remove some of the tattoo itself by working on that scabbing before it has finished doing its job.

Taking care of a tattoo is as much a part of the life of being a lover of body art as getting one was in the first place. By caring for the skin that proudly displays your tat, you will assure good health and a great looking design for a long time. And when you invest the effort, the money and the discomfort into a pattern that will be on your body forever, that tender loving care is certainly justified.

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