That is one of the most popular styles of tattoo art in America, and has been for decades. I know a guy who is fully sleeved with Irezumi - he is a member of my Masonic lodge. (He has over $15,000 of work on him.) If an average American tattoo person has high-quality ink on him or her, there’s a good chance some of it is in the Japanese style.
I’m surprised I can’t see any stylized koi in that picture. They’re also very popular among the heavily tattooed.
No more parochial than the SDMB. Every time a thread about tattooing comes up on the SDMB, a bunch of people will chime in to say that they assume that people with tattoos are criminals, former criminals, etc. In this day and age the vast majority of people with tattoos have never gotten worse than a traffic ticket and simple logic would point out that the sorority girl with a Japanese character on her back is probably not a hardened ex-con. Logic doesn’t always work. And it definitely doesn’t always work in Japan.
“You filed it, that puts me over the cluckin’ top, I want my Cadillac. I don’t wanna hear no cluckin’ shit and I don’t give a shit. Lingk puts me over the top. You filed it, it went downtown, now you owe me the car.”
No, but a tattoo on the lower back has its own stereotype. She might wish people thought she was an ex-con.
Yeah, people might think she’s a girl who likes to have sex! I know I would prefer being thought a felon to that horrifying possibility.
FWIW, I’m not particularly interested in Japanese culture, and I’m well aware of the existence of the yakuza. I don’t think they’re that obscure.
He’s about 65, so maybe not so surprising. My uncle had one too, although he was even older.
storyguide3, I see your point of course, and I actually knew that. I still just have trouble wrapping my head around it.
Roddy
Same.
A friend in Japan who popped over to teach English put a photo on Facebook of him in a dark suit for a night out.
I found I had to ask him if anyone thought he was aping the Yakusa. Apparently a few of his colleagues (Japanese or not, I didn’t ask) thought the same.
“Don’t say gaijin. Say Gaikokujin. It’s more polite. Jake’s a gaijin.”
I love that.