Last time, I wrote about trusting the processโ€”whether itโ€™s in healing, tattooing, or life. Todayโ€™s work built right on top of that idea, like adding another tattoo that flows into an existing piece. The subject this time: perspective.

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For my artist hour, I drew a panther. But instead of filling it all in solid, I left large areas white. In tattooing, negative space is just as important as the ink. It lets the design breathe, and gives the eye a place to rest so the bold lines and details have more impact. Whatโ€™s left undone is just as intentional as whatโ€™s been laid down. Thatโ€™s perspective.

Image of hands held together that could be viewed with different perspective

My Inktober prompt was โ€œweave.โ€ I drew two tattooed arms holding hands, fingers interlaced, with a rope binding their wrists together. At first glance, it could look like restriction, like being tied down. But from another perspective, it can symbolize commitmentโ€”two lives intertwined, held together by shared meaning, shared marks, shared trust.

Perspective is what connects these drawings to the bigger story. Itโ€™s about how we choose to see things. The same rope can look like a shackle or a bond. The same empty space can look unfinished or intentional. The same processโ€”whether healing with a doctor or sitting through a tattoo sessionโ€”can feel overwhelming or transformative, depending on the angle we take.

This is where perspective ties back to trust. Trusting the process doesnโ€™t mean giving up control. It means shifting perspective to see the value in each stageโ€”even the uncomfortable ones. Just like a tattoo in progress doesnโ€™t look finished until the last wipe down, sometimes life doesnโ€™t make sense until we step back and see how the pieces connect.ย  I read a story this week about how someoneโ€™s first tattoo did not turn out, and they were discouraged.ย  However, several others responded that just like anything else when you see it in the correct perspective, it is not a ruined ending, but rather a work in progress.ย  Where the first artist had failed to render what the customer expected, they could find another artist that could transform the beginnings of this work into a masterpiece.ย  They just needed to have the right perspective and trust in the process.

The start of a tattoo sleeve idea that will be built upon

Thatโ€™s the story I want Honor and Ink to tell, the process of transforming what can be viewed as mistakes into stories of triumph. (not the bad tattoos. LOL)ย  Not just isolated tattoos, but a body of work that flows togetherโ€”symbols, memories, and meaning woven into something larger. Each tattoo, like each blog entry, is part of a sleeve weโ€™re building together.

Next time, Iโ€™ll share how patience plays into this sleeveโ€”because perspective and trust only take root when weโ€™re willing to give things the time they need.


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