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Joe the Tattoo Guy Flash from the Bowery: Classic American Tattoos, 1900-1950
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Flash from the Bowery: Classic American Tattoos, 1900-1950

$95.00

The only known tattoo art that has survived from The Black Eye Barbershop in New York, where Samuel J. O'Reilley's modern-day electric tattoo machine was born and patented.

400 pages! Hardcover.

Between these pages are images of the original acetate rubbings from Charlie Wagner's turn of the 20th century tattoo shop, The Black Eye Barbershop, in the Bowery at Chatham Square in New York. The imagery of this classic flash preserves the origins of American tattoos—when tattoo art was transferred to the client from these templates via an acetate stencil. Everything was done by hand until O'Reilley's electrified tattoo machine changed history.

More than 900 individual pieces of flash that provide commentary on the shop's clientele and reveal some of the social, economic, and political ideas of the time.

Includes nautical themes, Asian imagery, flowers, boxers, circus characters, and plenty of girls

Author Cliff R. White has been researching and collecting tattoo memorabilia for almost 30 years.

This is an exciting collection of early American flash and a necessary book for the tattoo artist, aficionado, and student.

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The only known tattoo art that has survived from The Black Eye Barbershop in New York, where Samuel J. O'Reilley's modern-day electric tattoo machine was born and patented.

400 pages! Hardcover.

Between these pages are images of the original acetate rubbings from Charlie Wagner's turn of the 20th century tattoo shop, The Black Eye Barbershop, in the Bowery at Chatham Square in New York. The imagery of this classic flash preserves the origins of American tattoos—when tattoo art was transferred to the client from these templates via an acetate stencil. Everything was done by hand until O'Reilley's electrified tattoo machine changed history.

More than 900 individual pieces of flash that provide commentary on the shop's clientele and reveal some of the social, economic, and political ideas of the time.

Includes nautical themes, Asian imagery, flowers, boxers, circus characters, and plenty of girls

Author Cliff R. White has been researching and collecting tattoo memorabilia for almost 30 years.

This is an exciting collection of early American flash and a necessary book for the tattoo artist, aficionado, and student.

The only known tattoo art that has survived from The Black Eye Barbershop in New York, where Samuel J. O'Reilley's modern-day electric tattoo machine was born and patented.

400 pages! Hardcover.

Between these pages are images of the original acetate rubbings from Charlie Wagner's turn of the 20th century tattoo shop, The Black Eye Barbershop, in the Bowery at Chatham Square in New York. The imagery of this classic flash preserves the origins of American tattoos—when tattoo art was transferred to the client from these templates via an acetate stencil. Everything was done by hand until O'Reilley's electrified tattoo machine changed history.

More than 900 individual pieces of flash that provide commentary on the shop's clientele and reveal some of the social, economic, and political ideas of the time.

Includes nautical themes, Asian imagery, flowers, boxers, circus characters, and plenty of girls

Author Cliff R. White has been researching and collecting tattoo memorabilia for almost 30 years.

This is an exciting collection of early American flash and a necessary book for the tattoo artist, aficionado, and student.

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Email: lihach.joe@gmail.com

Joe The Tattoo Guy

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