Tattoo ideas

Tattoo ideas are usually organised by subject rather than style — animals, mythological figures, religious imagery, plants, or simple symbols — each with a history that often predates modern tattooing. Many of these motifs carry established associations: lions linked to power and authority, snakes to transformation or threat, anchors to maritime life and stability, flowers to memory, seasonality, or loss. At the same time, meanings are not fixed; they shift across cultures and periods, and are often reinterpreted in contemporary work. Looking into the origin and use of a motif adds weight to the design and helps avoid empty or misplaced references. Treated this way, choosing a tattoo idea becomes not only about picking an image but also about understanding what that image entails.

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Eagle tattoo

Eagle tattoo

The eagle occupies the highest position in nearly every symbolic system that includes it. In Greek mythology it carries the thunderbolts of Zeus. In Roman military culture it is the standard of the legion. In Christianity it is the symbol of John the Evangelist and a figure of the Resurrection. Eagles occur in the heraldic traditions and as national symbols of many countries (…).

Swallow tattoo

Swallow tattoo

The swallow is one of the most symbolically loaded birds in the world, and one of the most frequently tattooed. Its meanings have accumulated across millennia — in ancient Greece, in Roman funeral practice, in Chinese poetry, in Christian theology, in the nautical traditions of the Atlantic and Pacific, in British working-class culture(…).

Hamsa (Hand of Fatima) tattoo

Hamsa (Hand of Fatima) tattoo

The hamsa — also spelled khamsa, also called the Hand of Fatima, the Hand of Miriam, the Hand of Mary, or simply the protective hand — is one of the oldest continuously used apotropaic symbols in the world. An apotropaic object is one designed to turn away evil, and the hamsa’s function has been consistent for millennia (…)

Rose tattoo

Rose tattoo

The rose is almost certainly the single most frequently tattooed image in Western tattooing. It has been part of the flash vocabulary since the earliest commercial tattoo shops, it crosses every major style from traditional to fine line, it appears on every body part, and it carries a range of meanings wide enough to accommodate almost any personal intention.

Tiger tattoo

Tiger tattoo

In contemporary Western tattooing, the tiger is one of the most frequently requested animal subjects across all styles — realism, neo-traditional, illustrative, fine line, and traditional all produce tiger pieces regularly. The meanings clients attach to the image are diverse: zodiac identity, personal strength, a connection to Asian heritage, aesthetic preference(…)

Dragon tattoo

Dragon tattoo

The dragon is one of the most enduring and powerful symbols in tattoo history. With roots in both Eastern and Western mythology, it represents strength, transformation, and protection. From ancient Chinese emperors to modern fantasy fans, dragon tattoo holds rich cultural, spiritual, and historical meaning that continues to evolve.

Teardrop tattoo

Teardrop tattoo

Few tattoo symbols stir as much curiosity or misunderstanding as the teardrop tattoo. Small and placed under the eye, it’s more than just decoration — it often signals a deep personal history. While commonly associated with prison life and gang culture, its meaning isn’t fixed. For some, it represents loss or mourning; for others, acts of violence or survival.

Ladybug tattoo

Ladybug tattoo

The ladybug is one of the few insects almost nobody finds disgusting. Its folkloric meaning is positive across every culture that has a tradition for it. For someone who wants a tattoo carrying meaning without baggage, the ladybug tattoo offers something genuinely rare: a symbol most people read as warm without needing the wearer to explain why.

Anchor tattoo

Anchor tattoo

The anchor tattoo is one of the oldest and most recognisable motifs in the world of body art. Simple in shape, yet rich in meaning, this symbol has been etched into the skin of seafarers, soldiers, and civilians alike for centuries. Far more than a decorative choice, the anchor carries deep historical, cultural, and personal significance.