Electrum Premium Tattoo Supply
We are committed to providing tattoo artists with the best selection of top-quality tattoo products to enhance the craft. Our extensive inventory of tattoo supplies includes premium tattoo inks, tattoo needles, tattoo machines, and cartridge tattoo needles, ensuring you have the essential tools for exceptional artistry. We also offer a range of medical supplies, such as tattoo anesthetics and ointments, to support safe and comfortable tattooing experiences.
With a focus on quality, innovation, and customer satisfaction, Electrum Supply is your trusted partner in the tattoo industry, indlucing tattoo wholesale. Explore our diverse product lineup today, including Electrum Ink, and discover why professionals choose us for their tattoo supply needs.
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We Have Moved
We’ve moved our warehouse and storefront from CR 45 to 1527 W. Wilden Ave.
Thank you for your patience and for being part of the Electrum family.
Full details available in our blog post below.


Start Playing with Fire
- Safe AF - Industry standard internal membrane
- Stable AF - Featuring the FIRST Double Stabilization Technology (Patent Pending) - Say good bye to needle wobble
- Sharp AF - Crafted with the sharpest 316 Surgical Steel to stay sharp for even the LONGEST sessions
- Affordable AF - Stop paying the premium prices for cartridges - FIRE Cartridges are the same quality as brands like Peak Stellar and Kwadron, but without the excessive pricing.
We're OFFICIALLY changing the meaning of AF to (As Fire)
Use code TRYME20 for 20% off your first order. Use code DISRUPT30 on any Electrum cartridge orders over $500 (FIRE, Gold Standard & PMU) to save 30% every time you order
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Made With Love & Good Vibes
We are committed to providing tattoo artists with the best selection of top-quality tattoo products to enhance the craft. Our extensive inventory of tattoo supplies includes premium tattoo inks, tattoo needles, tattoo machines, and cartridge tattoo needles, ensuring you have the essential tools for exceptional artistry.
We also offer a range of medical supplies, such as tattoo anesthetics and ointments, to support safe and comfortable tattooing experiences.
Shop Electrum Merch
Blog posts
The Business Of Tattooing - Try Doing ANYTHING Else Before Complaining About This Slow Season
Tattooing gets slow. It’s not personal. It’s cycles, spending patterns, weather patterns, and sometimes the universe is just a little hater. But here’s the part no one likes hearing: sitting in your shop mumbling about how “it’s dead” won’t magically summon clients. 1. Gather Client Info (You Know… Like A Business) Tattoo artists love saying “I don’t know how to get clients.” Baby, you had them. They literally sat in your chair. You just never… collected their info. What you need:• Name• Email• Phone• Birthday• Interests (tiny multiple-choice works)• Past tattoos done by you• What they want next What to do with it:• Email them a quarterly newsletter (offers, new designs, studio updates)• A “birthday treat” flash discount• A “Hey, it’s been 6 months, let’s touch up/finish that piece” message Ways to collect this without feeling like a mall kiosk:• Add an iPad at checkout with a form• QR code on your front desk• Link in your bio for “studio updates + first-to-know drops”• Run a “Giveaway only for my mailing list” every few months People want to be contacted when it’s relevant. Just don’t be weird about it. 2. Fix Your Bio, Link, Highlights, and Grid Clarity beats aesthetics. Bio checklist:• Your city• Your style• Your booking link• A reason to book you Highlights:• Healed work• Aftercare• Available flash• FAQ• Prices/start rates Grid:Mix of:• Tattoo photos• Videos• Behind the scenes• Your face• Healed pieces• Flash• Offers People can’t book you if they don’t understand you. 3. Make Something. Anything. Slow season is creation season. • Draw new flash• Design a print• Build a healed gallery• Reorganize your booking process• Shoot a “day in the life”• Try a new cartridge group (Fire will make you feel like a god, by the way)• Set up retail in your studio (aftercare, prints, merch)• Test new workflows (Electrum Cleanse instead of harsh soaps) Motion creates momentum.Momentum creates bookings. 4. Email People Back Like It's 2019 You know what clients complain about most?Artists not replying. Set aside 30 minutes a day.Answer your emails.Follow up with old inquiries.Send price ranges, next steps, and booking instructions. This isn’t rocket science.It’s basic professional behaviour. 5. Build Community Instead of Waiting for One • Collaborate with a piercer• Make a “flash Friday” event• Host a meet-and-draw night• Ask other local businesses if you can leave cards or stickers• Donate a gift certificate to a fundraiser• Ask clients to send healed photos• Repost every healed photo in a highlight called “Healed” The artists who stay busy are the ones who stay visible. 6. Make a Website (Really. 2026 is coming. Be serious.)** You do not need a masterpiece. You need something functional. Bare-minimum pages:• Portfolio• About you• Booking form• Prices or starting rates• Aftercare• Shop location + hours• FAQ Easy tools that won’t fry your brain:• Wix• Squarespace• Shopify (if you want to sell prints or merch too) Your Instagram is not your website.Your booking link is not your portfolio.Your clients are confused, even if they’re too polite to say it. 7. Make Clear Offers (‘I have flash’ tells me nothing)** Artists keep posting the same three phrases:• “Books open”• “I have flash”• “DM to book” It’s vague. It’s giving: “please fail me harder.” Clear, irresistible offers look like:• “Three palm-sized floral designs available this month, $250 each, colour or black.”• “One last-minute spot tomorrow 3pm. Pick from these designs.”• “$100 off multi-session projects booked before Sunday.”• “These four flash pieces are pre-sized, pre-priced, and ready to go.” Tell people what you want them to buy.Humans love being explicitly guided. 8. DM People (And Relax, This Isn’t Begging) Don’t send “hey do you wanna book?” like some desperate Craigslist ad. This is how you do it: Human messages that actually work:• “Hey, I saw you got your first tattoo recently. How’d it heal?”• “You liked my post about lettering yesterday. Are you planning something?”• “Saw your story about your birthday. If you ever want a birthday tattoo, I’d love to design something.”• “Thanks for following. If you ever need inspo, I’ve got tons saved.” You’re not asking for a booking.You’re building rapport. People book tattoos with artists who feel like people, not robots holding machines. 9. Post Useful Stuff (Not Just Finished Tattoos) When it’s slow, educate. Teach. Share knowledge. Post things clients save because it’s useful. Ideas grounded in actual audience behaviour:• “Tattoo placement guide for first timers”• “What to wear for your tattoo appointment”• “How to choose reference photos”• “Tattoo pain chart”• “Healing week by week”• “Things I wish clients knew before their first big piece”• “Why good tattoos take time” If you’re constantly delivering value, people don’t forget you. 10. Talk on Camera (Quit Overthinking Your Face) Video performs better than photos. This isn’t a vibe; it’s every platform’s documented behaviour. But artists avoid video like it’s a hex. Stuff you can talk about without planning a TED Talk:• “Here’s a mistake beginners make in tattooing…”• “Designs I wish clients would ask for”• “Why artists charge what they charge”• “How to prep your skin before a tattoo”• “How lines heal vs how lines look day one”• “One thing I won’t tattoo anymore and why”• Time-lapse of a stencil• Your set-up (bonus points if you show Fire Cartridges, duh) The camera wants your voice, not your perfection. Slow seasons are inevitable.What you do during them is optional. This industry rewards the artists who act, build, talk, show up, and try.Not the ones sighing into their coffee. Now go do literally anything except complain. That’s the whole newsletter.
Read moreThe Art of Stretching Skin: The Secret to Clean Lines and Smooth Shading
If your lines look shaky, patchy, or unpredictable — it’s probably not your needle. It’s your stretch. Every apprentice obsesses over needles, voltage, cartridges, machines, grip size — but the unglamorous truth is this: If your stretch sucks, your tattoo will suck.Period. Master the stretch and suddenly your linework sharpens up, your shading smooths out, and your blowouts drop dramatically. It’s the least flashy skill in tattooing… and the most important. Let’s break down how to stretch skin like a professional instead of like a panicked raccoon. 1. The Golden Rule: Flat Skin = Predictable Needle Tattoo needles don’t work well on soft, loose, bunched-up skin.Loose skin absorbs the needle. Flat skin guides it. A perfect stretch gives you: • cleaner line edges• smoother shading gradients• predictable depth• fewer skips• less trauma If your tattoo feels like a fight?Your stretch is losing. 2. Use the Triangle Stretch (Non-Negotiable) Every pro uses this — and every beginner avoids it until someone forces them. How it works: You use three points of tension, creating a triangle that flattens the skin evenly in all directions. • Your tattooing hand grips and anchors• Your stretch hand pulls in one direction• Your thumb or fingers pull in the opposite direction This is how you create a true flat canvas — not a “kind of pulled” one. If you’re only pulling in one direction, the skin is still loose on the opposite end. And that’s where your line wobbles. 3. Your Stretch Hand Works Harder Than Your Tattooing Hand Apprentices try to control everything with the needle hand.That’s backwards. Real control comes from: the stretch + body position + angle Your tattooing hand should glide.Your stretch hand should be doing the labor. If your line is shaky, tighten your stretch.If your shading is patchy, tighten your stretch.If you’re overworking skin, tighten your stretch. 4. Stretch Toward the Direction You’re Tattooing Here’s a mistake every beginner makes: Stretching against their line pull. If your line is moving north, you pull the skin north.If your line is curving, you rotate your stretch with the curve.If your line is long, you walk your stretch hand along the line like a rail. Stretch supports your motion — it doesn’t fight it. 5. Use Your Whole Hand, Not Just Your Fingers Don’t claw at the skin with your fingertips.You’ll slip, lose tension, and drag your stencil. Instead: • plant your palm• press with your thumb pad• anchor with the heel of your hand Think of your hand as a clamp — not a grab. 6. Move Your Body, Not Just Your Wrist Your stretch should stay constant throughout the stroke.If you’re trying to keep your wrist twisted, bent, or overextended, your tension will fail halfway through the line. Shift your: • hips• chair• arms• shoulders The goal is a stable line of motion with a stable stretch. 7. Know Which Body Areas Need Extra Stretch Some skin is naturally soft and unforgiving: • ribs• stomach• inner bicep• elbow ditch• hip• butt• neck• armpit These areas REQUIRE a strong triangular stretch or your lines will wobble like drunk spaghetti. Other areas are naturally tight: • shin• forearm• outer bicep• thigh Easier canvas — but don’t get lazy.Lazy stretch = blowouts. 8. When Stretch Fails, Everything Fails If you see: • shaky lines• patchy shading• too-deep lines• inconsistent packing• blown-out edges• stencil smearing• machine struggling …you don’t need a new machine.You need a better stretch. 9. Practice Stretching Without Tattooing Seriously.Put gloves on and practice stretching different body parts on fake skin laid over towels, on friends, on yourself.Learn how skin moves: • long stretch vs. short stretch• tight pull vs. gentle pull• folding vs. flattening• loose areas vs. tight areas The better you understand skin, the better your tattooing will feel instantly. 10. Stretching = Professionalism Clients feel the difference.A clean stretch: • hurts less• looks smoother• feels more secure• creates trust• produces crisp, clean, confident tattoos Perfect linework and smooth shading aren’t just technical skills — they’re physical ones. Stretching is the bridge between your technique and the client’s skin. If you can master: ✔ the triangle stretch✔ tension in the direction of movement✔ full-hand pressure✔ stable body positioning✔ adjusting for different skin types Then suddenly everything becomes easier. Clean lines aren’t magic.Smooth shading isn’t luck.It’s all tension.
Read moreThe Business of Tattooing - Hidden Costs in Your Tattoo Setup You’re Not Tracking (But Definitely Should Be)
You know your machine cost $1,200. You probably track your ink, cartridges, and PPE. But there’s a good chance you’re still bleeding money through the little things—and we’re not talking plasma. These hidden costs quietly eat your profits and make it harder to scale, save, or even just breathe as an artist.
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