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How young is too young for a tattoo?

My son wants a tattoo for his 18th birthday in July.

I'm not against tattoos, as I have a couple.

I asked him, "What do you want a tattoo of?"

He says, "I want a tattoo of your name on my chest above my heart or my inner arm closest to my heart."

I asked, "Why my name?"

He says, "Because I love you so much, Mom."

He's going to his father's for Xmas break. I'm going to leave that up to his father. He got the idea of a tattoo from his dad.

What is your opinion? I'm not sure.

SleeplessInTexas 8 Dec 2
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44 comments

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1

18 is fine. I got my kid one for graduating high school with a 4.3 gpa. I know a member from lamb of god and I asked him who was the best “ Artist “ in Richmond and he gave me her name and texted her for me.

She actually interviewed my child and critiqued the art that my kid had come up with and one week $1300 later my kid had an official Amy Black tat.
And now my kid has two more one for graduating VaTech and the third for the first job promotion.

But that’s just me I’ve got a few myself and the best advice that I can give is too actually spend that money and go to an actual artist who can free hand and not some stencil using ink slinger.
The work will be 1,000 times better and your kid will have some bragging points amongst tattoo geeks.

6

If I am alive I am too young.

5

I have five adult kids, and we are a tattoo family. My kids are very close, to this day. Well, a few years ago they decided, on their own, that to honor their closeness each one would get a Roman numeral of their birth order on their 18th birthday - which they've each done.

Since then they all have multiple tattoos, as do I.

I strongly suggested the following to each of them as they started getting them.

  1. you can only get an area tattooed once, so make sure you get something meaningful to you for each piece
  2. ONLY GET NAMES OF BLOOD RELATIVES - NEVER GET A S.O.'s or spouse's name - it's the kiss of death for the relationship.
  3. only get them in places you can cover, at least until you are further into your career & established, and you have a bunch of ink already
  4. no face tattoos unless you're a tattoo artist or professional musician; otherwise you'll regret it
  5. quadruple check all words & scripts you get before you get it
  6. take care of your ink if you want it to last, especially use sunscreen

If they're mature enough to understand these rules then they'll be fine (not like you can stop them anyway). ?

Hope these help.

Excellent guidelines!

4

if your old enough to join the military , your an adult and can start making the same stupid mistakes the rest of us adults do.. imo

4

Your Daughters new "Love of her Life" she's pregnant by him and they will come live with you....[agnostic.com]

3

Personality i won't date anyone with a tattoo...
Legally most state it 18 without parent permission.
My Question why would a parent ever give permission for this.
Depending on where and what it could affect the life forever... things like employment.

Damn so you wouldn’t date my big ol Russian looking self ?
But anyway ummm if you actually do the right parental thing and make them think about it and take them to reputable places and let them tell your kid why they wouldn’t put a tat on certain places or they wouldn’t just put anything on them.

My kid has 3 and you can’t see them with work clothes on and the smallest one is 10” in diameter.
I’m just saying that my parents were absolutely against it and I came home from my first post with
And I damn near had a vest.
So maybe a little might go further. Just saying

@Rdurham Bruh, are you serious? lol

@SleeplessInTexas Yes, very much so.
My reasoning are as follows:
1)I find tatto of all form unattrative.. they take away from the beaulty of the human body.

  1. Did they get it because of everyone else is getting one. or some other reason... I place tatoos and self cutting in the same group....Mental disorder of some type since i can't tell who mental ill and the person that just got it because of peer pressure or because it in style. best to just walk away

  2. health factor... back ally tatto... possible infection from group tattoos..

In a short way too much stuff to deal with and i don't even know the person, best to more on to some that doesnt have tattoos

3

Since he will be (mostly) legally considered an adult, it's really only his choice and requires no parental permission. However, I appreciate that he wants your approval and the tat he wants is a reflection of his feelings for his mom. I would be supportive, but counsel him on the permanence of tattoos. People often get them impulsively from less than talented artists and then later wind up having a cover up done to make them look good. This is a pretty simple tattoo and hard to screw up, IMO.

3

Once he's 18, he's free to make his own choices.
Beyond that, I've got nothin'.

3

I'll be 29 soon.... I have no tattoos... It's my personal choice... Some tattoos look beautiful if done by a professional...

Good on you girl, stay tattoo free.

3

My daughter did the same thing - wanted a tattoo, but waited until her 18th. Even then, she didn't rush to get it on her birthday. While waiting, she would draw on her skin various ideas and "wear" them to see how comfortable she was with them. She also talked with the staff at the parlor for feedback before coming back to have the design done.

For the curious - my daughter did foreign exchange one summer. She had the lat/long of the host family's house tattooed on her side as a memory of it. This is on her side (rib cage) - and easily covered if she chooses.

As @LeighShelton says below - timeless tattoos are a good choice.

I waited until I was 37 before I got my first, and only, tattoo.
When I was selecting what I wanted to get, I asked myself one question every time I thought I'd found the design I wanted, "will I still like this when I'm 60?"
I got a small butterfly, just starting to extend it's wings-not fully open, on my left shoulder.
Twenty years later, I've never regretted it. Not once.

@KKGator And that's why I don't have any tattoos myself. Couldn't come with any design I wanted for a lifetime. So just put it aside for myself and admire it on others.

the only choice

@RPardoe and that is the best thing you can do. tattoos are a selfish unneeded thing you don't need so choose wisely.

3

As an ex tattooist and a heavily tattood man I will always say choose wisely. I think you need timeless tattoos for obvious reasons. Blood family ie not your wife/husband are fine as they will always be your family.

2

When you are too young to afford your own tattoo, you are too young to have your own tattoo.

2

Tell him to get something representative instead. Looks way better than the "Mom tattoo". 😉 That's my 2 cents.

If you have a favorite flower or animal - go with that. Way better than explaining the name is Mom at a later date. (names aren't considered great karma in the tattoo world either).

2

My mom nearly pireced my ears when I was two.

2

That's sweet🙂 , but he is really young and has to live with it for the rest of his life. Of my 3 tattoos I regret 2 of them, but at 19 and 20 it seemed cool.

2

I’m not particularly fond of them. I just don’t get the need to mark up your body. That being said, be glad he asked you and respects your opinion.
At 18 he’s an adult. The only name one should ever tattoo on thier body is a parent or child as those are forever, partners, lovers and spouses can change. Good luck, it sounds like you’ve got a great son.

2

More important than age.... can he afford to pay for it?

2

The thing that always comes to mind when I think of people that have tattoos is why would you want to give yourself ergot poisoning?

How do you get ergot poisoning from tattoos? I thought it was infected grain.

@Bakunin Just so happens the same fungi grows on the inks used in tattooing.

@azzow2 wow, I never knew. I had a problem with a tattoo when I was in my teens. Had to get medical attention. Never again for me.

@Bakunin [activebeat.com]

@Gooniesnvrdie It is more than overlooked because tattoos are so common today.

@Gooniesnvrdie Like I said it is overlooked.

2

Well, I'm 68.... no ink.... yet.
😉

2

My sons both wanted tattoos. The rule is, the tattoo design & spot has to be a good idea for a year. If you still want that tatto in that place after a year, then get it. Also, a year gives you time to save up money & tip for artist, research artist portfolios, research local shops, etc. So far, no one has any regrets.

2

I got my first one at 18 and don't have any regrets. That said, never get someone's name tattooed on your body - nothing good ever comes from that.

GwenC Level 7 Dec 2, 2018
2

There are many good suggestions here already, in my experience it's wise to wait a year (at least) after deciding on the tattoo to see if anything changes. After all, one year will fly by when compared to the lifetime of the tattoo. Also, know exactly how big, where, & what color(s) you want before going to the artist. I've seen much regret over what a person 'had in mind' opposed to the artist interpretation. Finally, get the work in a place that can be covered if needed. My best friend is getting a tattoo that is on the top of her hand removed because although it's beautiful, it's not something she wants now, as a future doctor.

2

I would agree that at 18 it's his decision. And like others have said, make sure he's sure of the design and he goes to a reputable tattoo studio/artist. You get what you pay for as well. Normally, small simpler tattoos get relegated to apprentices at tattoo studios. Not saying apprentices are terrible but he may want a more experienced tattoo artist for better quality. Tattoos really are not as permanent as most people think. Tattoo removal is quite common these days. Blurred aged tattoos can also be touched up years later and tattoos you are not happy with can be redone in a different way (coverups are a common thing as well). You have tattoos so I would guess that you already know all that. And since you have tattoos you can help him make sure that the aftercare is done correctly.

2

Awe thats precious but I'd recommend he get a piece of actual art with your initials incorporated in it or a fierce version of your spirit animal of choice or something lol. I mean knock on wood it shouldn't matter but you don't wanna wind up in a group shower (team sports, military, prison) or try to hook up with someone and your only tattoo is your mom's name. Is he a buff badass that could pull that off n dare someone to go awwwwwww at him? If not I'd get something other than a script of my moms name. But that's very sweet that he wants to. Not sayin Id mock it or that society's attitudes are correct but the 3 things Id try not to advertise are 1) how much money you have 2) that youre a cuddly sweetheart and 3) that you can fix computers. A wise man keeps all that shit on the DL ?

2

Tattoos are a major cultural activity. At eighteen in the developed world a person is an adult. They can drink, have sex, get married, pay tax, vote,run for parliament, fight in a war, got grown up prison and think for themselves.
In reality, many 18 year olds are still children.
One of my grandfathers had tattoos, lots of them. He got his first at age 16. The badge of the Old 57th, The Die-Hards Middlesex regiment. He collected lots more. When I was old enough to start taking interest in such things, he made me promise never to get any. Your life changes, tattoos remain and blur. When clothes fall out of fashion we can throw them away, tattoos stay. Every time a person gets a tattoo, they risk artistic horrors upon their skin.
For your son, what if that special person glimpses your name, will she be put off by misunderstanding the reason?
If he gets a tattoo, make sure it is the best money can buy.

2

Well, he's 18, so telling him no will probably make him want one even more.

Twenty would be my recommendation for permanent body-art. Then again, it's covered when he wears clothes, there is laser removal and unless you change your name it seems unlikely it's a tattoo he'll have deep regrets about.

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