Thin black lines radiating outward from a central point on the sternum, tapering to needle-fine tips, curving along the collarbones and down between the ribs. The pattern is symmetrical, angular, and organic at the same time — part skeletal diagram, part circuit board, part occult symbol, part something that does not have an analogue in any older visual tradition.
Tattoo styles
Tattoo styles are not a fixed system but a set of working conventions — ways of drawing, lining, shading, and composing that have developed over time within different traditions. Some names point to established visual systems with clear rules, while others describe how the tattoo is made or how it looks in terms of tone. There are also practices in which style cannot be separated from cultural meaning and protocol. At the same time, newer labels often emerge from trends and hybridisation, borrowing freely from existing approaches without forming a stable canon. In practice, “style” serves less as a strict category and more as a shared reference point — helping align expectations between artist and client around form, durability, and intent.
ALL | Culture-bound | Traditional | Neo-traditional | New School | Realism | Microrealism | Black and Grey | Chicano | Fine Line | Blackwork | Illustrative | Minimalism | Patchwork | Trash Polka | Dotwork | Sacred Geometry | Ornamental | Biomechanical | Cyber-Sigilism
