The traditional tattoo style (in Western culture) is often characterized by bold outlines, a limited color palette, and easily recognizable symbols. Contemporary tattooists, however, are changing the association with every new bit of body art. Tatu Panda is one artist inking tattoos in an unmistakable style. His fine-line, microrealistic pieces employ optical illusions to look like they are levitating above the skin. Crafted with meticulous attention to detail, his most striking pieces feature marine creatures as they appear to swim the length of an arm. The floating effect comes from a perfectly diffused shadow that slightly overlaps with the bodies of sharks, rays, and alligators.
“It’s a straightforward approach for me,” Tatu Panda tells My Modern Met, “[it’s] precision, detail, and craftsmanship that pops.” The floating tattoos offer the wearer something unconventional while still being subtle. “A lot of my clients also want something deeply personal that doesn’t scream for attention, but still makes people stop and look twice,” the Miami-based tattooist explains. “I wanted to make it ‘pop’ so I did that in the simplest way possible. There is elegance in simplicity.”
Beyond the aesthetic qualities of his work, Tatu Panda’s approach is meant to help push the industry forward. “Microrealism was never just a style to me,” he shares, “it was my way of giving the middle finger to the industry. I’ve always had a problem with authority, and this industry has a history of gatekeeping anything that threatens tradition. So when they laughed at microrealism, dismissed it, tried to ostracize anyone pushing it forward, I doubled down. I built my name on the very thing they said was impossible.”
To see more of his work and book an appointment, you can follow Tatu Panda on Instagram.
Tattoo artist Tatu Panda creates microrealistic pieces that employ optical illusions to look like tiny animals are levitating above the skin.
Crafted with meticulous attention to detail, his most striking pieces feature marine creatures as they appear to swim the length of an arm.
The floating effect comes from a perfectly diffused shadow that slightly overlaps with the bodies of sharks, rays, alligators, sea turtles, and more.
View this post on Instagram
In addition to the floating tattoos, Tatu Panda uses shading to give subjects the appearance of three-dimensionality.
Tatu Panda: Instagram
My Modern Met granted permission to feature photos by Tatu Panda.
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