Ten-year tattoo artist Steve Labofish custom tattoos the arm of
John Brady, 22, of College Park, Md.
A sun shines on Dan Yu's back, alongside a swimming koi fish. A tree soon may
grow on his arm. "Your body's an empty canvas, so you almost want to continue to
add to it," said Yu, 28, as he showed off his tattoos.
A generation or
two ago, Yu's tattoos ! to say nothing of his pierced nose ! probably would have
placed him in a select company of soldiers, sailors, bikers and carnival
workers. But no longer: The American University employee is among about 36% of
Americans age 18 to 29 with at least one tattoo, according to a survey.
The study, scheduled to appear Monday on the website of the Journal of the
American Academy of Dermatology, provides perhaps the most in-depth look at
tattoos since their popularity exploded in the early 1990s.
The results suggest that 24% of Americans between 18 and 50 are tattooed;
that's almost one in four. Two surveys from 2003 suggested just 15% to 16% of
U.S. adults had a tattoo.
"Really, nowadays, the people who don't have them are becoming the unique
ones," said Chris Keaton, a tattoo artist and president of the Baltimore Tattoo
Museum.
But body art is more than just tattoos.
About one in seven people surveyed reported having a piercing anywhere other
than in the soft lobe of the ear, according to the study. That total rises to
nearly one in three for the 18-to-29 set. Just about half ! 48% ! in that age
category had either a tattoo or piercing.
Given their youth, that suggests the percentage of people with body art will
continue to grow, said study co-author Anne Laumann, a Northwestern University
dermatologist.
"They haven't had time to get their body piercing. They haven't had time to
get their tattoo. They are just beginning to get into it and the number is
already big," Laumann said.
So why has body art become so popular?
Laumann and others believe it allows people to broadcast to the world what
they are all about. Others call it sign of rebellion or a rite of passage. The
survey found nearly three-fourths of the pierced and nearly two-thirds of the
tattooed made the leap before 24.
"It's a very easy way to express something that you think represents part of
your identity ! that you don't have to tell someone but you can just have seen,"
said Chelsea Farrell, 21, an American University senior from Albany, N.Y.
Farrell has a tattooed fish on each hip and a Celtic knot on the small of her
back.
The survey also found that what your mother may have told you about who has
tattoos is true: People who drink, do drugs, have been jailed or forgo religion
are more likely to be tattooed.
The same holds for piercings, though rates do not appear to vary with
education, income or job category. In that sense, they appear to be "different
animals," said Laumann, who has traditionally pierced ears but no tattoos.
One obvious difference is that piercings can be easily removed, unlike
tattoos.
"I guess I liked the way they looked and the rush of getting them pierced, as
well as them not being permanent. I can take them out and the holes will close
up," said Simah Waddell, 21, of Rochester, N.Y., of her pierced nose, tongue,
belly button and ears.
Waddell, who is entering her senior year at American University, said she
suffered no side effects, other than the anger of her parents. The survey
suggests that is not always the case for others with piercing. Nearly one in
four reported medical problems, including skin infections. Among those with
mouth or tongue piercings, an equal proportion reported chipped or broken teeth.
For tattoos, 13% of respondents had problems with healing. Generally, the
Food and Drug Administration receives few reports of complications from tattoos.
The industry is regulated by state and local officials, but not the FDA, and
there is no such thing as an agency-approved tattoo pigment or ink. The FDA is
considering more involvement, said Linda Katz, director of agency's Office of
Cosmetics and Colors.
"If you look at the fact that a quarter of adults have a tattoo, it's amazing
how safe the industry is," said R. Rox Anderson, a Harvard Medical School
dermatologist and tattoo removal expert. None of the survey respondents had ever
had a tattoo removed, though 17% had considered it.
Freedom-2 LLC, a Philadelphia company co-founded by Anderson, hopes to launch
the first of two lines of not-so-permanent tattoo inks next year, though without
FDA approval.
To create the ink, pigments would be encapsulated in a polymer and the
microcapsules injected into the skin. A tattoo would be permanent only as long
as its wearer wanted it to be.
It would only take a few pulses of a laser to break open the capsules and
release the ink into the body to be safely absorbed, said Martin Schmieg, the
company's president and chief executive officer.
A second ink, to be available in 2008, would rely on the same technology,
except the capsules would dissolve on their own. Depending on the version, the
tattoos would naturally vanish after six months, 12 months or 24 months.
"It will be like wearing a tattoo like it's jewelry, where you will be able
to take it off. It will just fade on its own," Schmieg said.
The telephone survey on tattoos included 253 women and 247 men and was
conducted in 2004. It has a margin of error of 4.5 percentage
points.