Wednesday, May 25, 2016

Tattoo Nepal

So What Exactly Is a Tattoo?
It seems like everyone has a tattoo these days. Once sported only by sailors, outlaws, and biker gangs, tattoos are now popular body decorations for many people. And it's not just anchors, skulls, and battleships anymore — from school emblems to Celtic designs to personalized symbols, people have found many ways to express themselves with their tattoos.



A tattoo is a puncture wound, made deep in your skin, that's filled with ink. It's made by penetrating your skin with a needle and injecting ink into the area, usually creating some sort of design. What makes tattoos so long-lasting is they're so deep — the ink isn't injected into the epidermis (the top layer of skin that you continue to produce and shed throughout your lifetime). Instead, the ink is injected into the dermis, which is the second, deeper layer of skin. Dermis cells are very stable, so the tattoo is practically permanent.
Tattoos used to be done manually — that is, the tattoo artist would puncture the skin with a needle and inject the ink by hand. Though this process is still used in some parts of the world, most tattoo shops use a tattoo machine these days. A tattoo machine is a handheld electric instrument that uses a tube and needle system. On one end is a sterilized needle, which is attached to tubes that contain ink. A foot switch is used to turn on the machine, which moves the needle in and out while driving the ink about 1/16 inch or less (about 1 millimeter) into your skin.
Most tattoo artists know how deep to drive the needle into your skin, but not going deep enough will produce a ragged tattoo, and going too deep can cause bleeding and intense pain. Getting a tattoo can take about 15 minutes to several hours, depending on the size and design chosen.

Tattoo House in Nepal are


JADS TATTOOS
 JADS Tattoos, located in Thamel, Kathmandu, Nepal was established in 2007 by John Maharjan and Sudeep Khadka. Two friends who had already been tattooing separately came together to open one of Kathmandu’s finest tattoo studios. Known all over Nepal for its detailed and artistic work the studio has gained a high reputation since it opened, it prioritizes hygiene and safety for its customers and to all tattoo enthusiasts.

JADS priority is always customer satisfaction, to understand the feelings of its customers and to work according to their concept and design. Our artists work with customers to come up with the designs and to ensure that the right choice is made and will not continue until and unless approval is received from customers.

JADS Tattoos covers all tattoo design styles and cover ups, we do not encourage copied ideas, but to create your own to give originality and in the end to leave with full satisfaction.

Studio Hygiene

All needles, inks and gloves are single use only.



Before a tattoo the area is wiped down with disinfectant, areas that will be used or touched during a tattoo are covered in clear plastic and new ink and ink holders are taken out. Disposable gloves are used and then taken off and thrown away, before and after each stage of tattooing. After approval received from the customer for the final positioning, of the applied stencil, a sterile packaged needle is unwrapped in front of the customer as well as sterile instruments and supplies.

After a tattoo is finished needles are put into Sharp containers, after being wrapped in clear plastic and then later on sent to an inferno to be melted down. Any equipment that has come in contact with blood or bodily fluids is put into bio hazard containers and then put into an Ultra Sonic cleaner first and then an Autoclave for sterilization. Equipment that cannot be thrown away or put in the Autoclave will be wiped thoroughly with disinfectant. The area is then wiped down with disinfectant and all other materials that have been used are thrown away.

JADS Tattoos will not hesitate to decline a customer if s/he has a contraindicated skin condition or are under the influence of alcohol or drugs.