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            Polynesian Tattoo Designs???

Question:
I recently visited Moorea on my holiday and I am interested in the polynesian style of tattoo. I didn't have enough time (for reasonable reasons) to research and get a tattoo while in Moorea. I'm thinking of getting a half sleeve done of nothing but polynesian black work. Now the problem, I am looking for books or online resources or even flash art with examples of the polynesian style. I also want to find an artist in NYC or the surrounding area that can do this type of tattoo for me. I have the basic idea in my head but I do not know how to draw something like this. Could anyone help me?

Answer:
- For reasonable reasons, we don't do a persons research for them. It seems th - I should've said that I have been looking online and so far have come up with one book called Modern Primitives that I've since ordered. I just wanted to see if there was anyone else with interest or experience in Polynesian Tattoos that could show me the right direction. I thought the days of Usnet Gods peeing on the newbies was over. Kinda reminds me why I try to be nice in the groups that I have experience with. ere are search engines for the internet. Or so I'm told. I don't need to know the information you are looking for, so I'm not even going to do a simple search on Google.com or even Dogpile. Of course, after you find what you want, you might want to come back and ask if the design you've chosen (and don't post a binary here) is appropriate for the arm. I seem to remember there are ones you do for one area, and others you don't. If you're going to emulate a custom, at least do it correctly - Skookums suggests that you slightly adjust your mental perspective and say something like "I want designs for contemporary neo-tribal blackwork after the Polynesian style." When you are confronted with The Real Thing (in the way of ethnic tattooing), you have to remember that any attempt to reproduce it is unavoidably an imitation, not to say rather ersatz, and something of a parody. To explicitly remember that your own tattoo is of this nature, and in a sense a tribute to The Real Thing, will keep your mind in good working order. Also, you should know that throughout the -nesias tattooing was eradicated by missionaries with the sole exception of Samoa. With that exception, modern tattooing on those islands is thus itself a revival, and could also be described as imitation, ersatz, or parodic. But Skookums doesn't have the chutzpah to complain when people try to recover their own cultural heritage. As for sources, the ReSearch volume "Modern Primitives" includes a number of design sheets compiled by Hanky-Panky. If you enlarge these with a xerox machine, they will serve as usable source material. Also, Don Hardy's TattooTime series (five volumes) includes a fair number of examples drawn from Trish Allen's thesis at the University of Hawaii. She compiled all known illustrations of Oceanic tattooing up to 1900 or so, including many from very rare and obscure Russian publications. Oh, yes, one last source: some years ago Taschen published a fat book of tattoo pictures drawn from Hanky-Panky's collection. This may be o.p. but is worth looking for. Try www.bookfinder.com.



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