Dragon Tatoos
Dragon Tatoos can be inked on the skin of both male and female tattoo enthusiasts. The image of a Dragon is usually indicative of power and prowess. Yet, the image of a Dragon can be elegant, refined, and dignified as well. It is all up to the person who is getting inked with one variety of the many offered through the application of Dragon Tatoos.
Depending on which one of the many Dragon Tatoos which are available for you to chose from, Dragon Tatoos can be conceptualized and designed—like most other tattoos—to fit your specific personality, your tastes, your beliefs, and what it is specifically that you want to express to the people whom you show your Dragon Tatoos.
While it is common to see dragon tatoos inked in with vibrant colors—such as gold, rich shades of yellow, radiant reds, and oftentimes various shades of orange—dragon tatoos, even those with aesthetic elements which are specific to traditional Eastern culture and dragon symbolism, can be inked in with virtually any ink color that can come to either the tattoo artist’s or the tattoo owner’s mind.
Dragon tatoos conceptualized with the traditional Dragon imagery of ancient Japan in mind are often more serpent or snakelike in nature. According to traditional Japanese culture and mythology, the dragon is even a water-dwelling creature. Dragon tattoos inked with Japan’s traditional dragon imagery in mind could give people a lot of awesome aesthetic options as far as how they get their dragon tatoos inked on—especially females.
Dragon tatoos look great when they are inked in as full back pieces on girls or even as half or full sleeves on their arms. These are just some examples of how large-scale dragon tattoos can be great additions to a female’s body. Large scale dragon tatoos offer the particular placement option—that looks super sexy on a lot of female bodies—of placing dragon tatoos on the inner part of a girl’s upper torso.
This particular dragon tatoos placement would extend down the length of one side of the girl’s torso, down towards her hips, outwards toward her pelvic area, looping around to her back, and connecting underneath her hip bone to the outer portion of buttock, and then finally upwards—to where it could meet the lower portion of her back. By gently extending towards her pelvis, looping under her hip, around to her buttock, and over it, slowly reaching its end on her lower back, this dragon tatoos placement—while on large-scale design—arguably adds an artistic embellishment to the already enticing nature of the most sensual features of the female body.
Dragon tatoos in the context of the traditional Chinese dragon tradition are considered to great talisman (or good luck charms) to the people who have them inked onto their skin. Dragon tatoos in the Chinese tradition are usually inked-in with colors such as rich reds, deep yellows and marigolds, and many shades of orange.
Beware though: according to Chinese culture, Dragon tatoos colored-in with white ink could potentially be seen as indicative of death and a warning of the victory of the Western world, most likely something you do not want to express through your dragon tatoos.


