
Prison tattoo is the practice of creating and displaying tattoos in a prison environment. They are often used to denote gang membership, prison status, family ties, spiritual beliefs, and are often used as a form of code and have hidden meanings. Tattooing is prohibited in most prisons and therefore is done in secret, with temporary tattoo equipment. As part of the expanding prison system, tattoos are taken seriously by both prisoners and their guards. Tattoos obtained in prison are of particular importance both for the prisoners themselves and for returning to the streets.
Prison Tattoo Techniques
There are two standard types of tattoo guns for prison, a counter and a relay. The relay gun is much better than the clamping mechanism, and now it is more widely used. The prisoner breaks his most valuable possession, radio and removes the transistor. Then, a thin copper wire is removed that is wrapped around a screw that provides an automatic relay on power up. Then the prisoner must somehow receive the bristles from the wire brush from the maintenance and sharpen them to secure the needle. The cylinder is made of high-quality mechanical pencil, and the reinforcement bar is made of a piece of flexible pallet tape and a dime-sized magnet. Then the submachine gun is powered by a transistor of another radio. So owning one of these tattoo guns is quite expensive and in prison “money” can be difficult to find.
Obviously, without this equipment, the ole selection method and fabric with some types of pins also work.
Prison prison tattoo recipe
Get a metal container, best cut half a soda can and put baby oil and cotton in a jar. You will then need a flat piece of metal that can be put on the hole of the can without closing it. Burn baby oil and cotton, allowing the smoke to strike the metal sheet and tarnish it as deep as possible. Then you clear all black powder and repeat. You want to use a credit card or something similar for this, as razors and other metal scrapers can leave splinters in the powder. Put your tattoo powder in a small container so that I recommend the toothpaste cushion and fill the cap in half. Then add a couple of drops of a clear, odorless shampoo. To stir thoroughly. Your completed inks should have a feather texture or maybe a little thicker. To dilute the ink, add shampoo and thicken it, add more powder.
Some prisoners simply use ink from a pen. There are various ways of inventing ink recipes, and all of them were probably used at one time or another.
Due to the lack of proper equipment and sterile conditions in prison, a tattoo in prison represents a health risk, such as HIV / AIDS and hepatitis. However, prisoners are ominously aware of this and take as many precautions as possible and given the conditions in which they operate.
Many prisoners who make a tattoo are very talented artists. Having quality tattooing skills, prison is a very lucrative skill to possess. Experienced tattoo artists in prison give far more chances to earn "money" than prisoners who try to run drugs behind the scenes say. They also receive remarkable respect for other prisoners, as well as for correctional workers themselves. Unlike other mind-bending exercises, such as gossip or gang-related stimuli, the tattoo artist engages himself in skin and art.
Some meanings of tattoo in prison in North America
Three points arranged as a triangle. - This design is most often found between the index finger and the thumb. Design means "mi vida loca", which means "my crazy life."
Tattoo Tears - this design is worn by the eye. This indicates that the owner killed someone or that a person had a friend in prison.
shamrock - this design is worn anywhere on the body and is often found on those associated with the Aryan brotherhood. In this case, the trefoil often also includes the number 12, and 1 for “A”, and 2 for “B.”
Ace of spades - Wear anywhere in the body, this design is mainly worn by those who belong to Aco Town or Asian Boyz. And, which is often placed in the middle of a shovel, is meant to symbolize Asian, while a shovel symbolizes theft.
Number 13 - this tattoo indicates membership in a gang of Mara Salvatrucha 13.
Number 14 - this tattoo refers to belonging to Nuestra Familia, which is a prison gang. This gang is associated with the street gang Northos.
City code - Many gang members use the area code for their surroundings as a tattoo, although this may be outdated because the area codes are changed.
Watch without hands - most often on the shoulder, this tattoo symbolizes “time”.
web - usually found on the elbow, this tattoo is used by white suprematists to demonstrate that they seriously injured or killed one of their “opponents”. Design is also commonly found in people who were in prison.
Watch faces without hands - pass the time
Graves with numbers - years when they were inside
Tombstones with numbers and RIP - mourning the death of a friend
Woman's face crying - there is someone waiting outside
SWP - the highest white power
100% pure - pure white or anglo
Cell window with a sun or bird showing - waiting for release
Other countries, such as Russia, Australia, France, Great Britain, China and others, have prisons with prisoners who carry tattoos with significant meanings. In fact, Russia and its former republics have a very complex set of tattoo values.
One very important point prisoners believe that when they hit the tattoo becomes caught. If a prisoner is caught getting a tattoo, they are fined 15 days in solitary confinement. Being suspected of getting a tattoo may indicate a reddening of the skin where a fresh tattoo was printed, which still has consequences, such as a charge. But hey, if your life without parole really bothers you?
The concept of prison tattoos is hardly modern. There is evidence that prisoners have been tattooed in Egyptian times. Like many of the tattoos that prisoners wore today, these tattoos also had significant meaning. For example, king tattoos or pyramids were worn by those who were very dangerous, such as assassins, main bosses and masterminds.

