Thursday, May 6, 2010

angie nash tattoos

Everything you always wanted to know about Hawaiian Flower Tattoos



Hawaiian flower tattoos express love and desire in women. But it is not that only women can have those tattoos. Young girls also get such tattoos done to express their love and secret desire. They are like roses expressing the deep unsaid feelings of women.

Types of Tattoos

Butterfly tattoos, orchid lei tattoos and hibiscus tattoos are some of the popular designs in Hawaiian flower tattoos. You can combine them with different shapes like mountains and turtles and a variety of other earthy materials. This will add a distinct flavor to your tattoo. Hawaiian flower tattoos have a strong scent of the flora and are very earthy and passionate in nature.

Shoulders, breast, buttocks and belly are some of the parts where you can get a Hawaiian flower tattoo. You can choose a body part according to your own wish. Some people even get these tattoos done at the back of their ear.

Hawaiian flower tattoos have a wide range- you can choose lantana tattoos or Ohio tattoos. You can also choose between hibiscus tattoos and flame tree tattoos. Then you also have the option of Mexican tulip poppy tattoos, silk oak tattoos and coreopsis tattoos.

Tattoo Art- Culture of Hawaii

Hawaiian flower tattoos have always been a part of the ancient culture of Hawaii. The tattoos are a direct descendant of the tribal culture of Polynesian Islands.

In fact, tattoo art has been so popular in Hawaii that a new distinctive art has emerged- that of printing tattoos on shirts. These shirts were commonly known as Hawaiian shirts. Not only has tattoo art has been deeply entwined with the culture of Hawaii; it also shows a deep faith that the people of Hawaii have in God.

But the use of tattoo as a cultural symbol began much later when tattooing began to be accepted as an art in western countries. Before that tattooing used to be a part of the indigenous rites of Hawaii. A Hawaiian tattoo is supposed to bring to its owner happiness and protection form evil. They also showed personal identity of the owner.

Kakau was the name given to original tribal Hawaiian tattoos. Thus it would not be wrong to say that Hawaiian flower tattoos also symbolize nature, adornment and individual aspiration.

Sugar cane juice and kukui nuts used to be mixed together to prepare a black ink, which was used to do the tattoo in older days. Femininity is one of the strongest symbols of Hawaiian flower tattoos and it continues to enhance the grace of the fairer sex till today.

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