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Electrum's tattoo culture blog

Electrum's Tattoo Culture Blog

SELF TAUGHT SERIES - Common Tattoo Machine Mistakes Beginners Make (and How to Avoid Them)
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SELF TAUGHT SERIES - Common Tattoo Machine Mistakes Beginners Make (and How to Avoid Them)

Memphis Mori

Learning to use a tattoo machine is where a lot of damage gets done, not because beginners are careless, but because machines amplify every mistake. A tattoo machine does exactly what your hands tell it to do. If your fundamentals aren’t solid, the machine doesn’t compensate. It exposes problems fast, and often permanently. These are the most common machine mistakes beginners make, why they happen, and how to avoid locking them into your muscle memory. 1. Pushing Too Hard Into the Skin Why it happens Beginners often equate pressure with control. When lines aren’t landing cleanly, the instinct is to push harder instead of adjusting depth, speed, or hand movement. What it causes Excessive trauma Blowouts Scarring Poor healing More pressure does not equal better saturation. It equals damage. How to avoid it Learn what correct depth feels like on synthetic skin Focus on consistent hand speed rather than force Let the machine do the work If you feel resistance, you’re already too deep. 2. Overworking the Same Area Why it happens Beginners chase perfection in one pass, repeatedly going over the same line or area to “fix” it. What it causes Skin trauma Patchy healing Ink fallout Long-term texture issues Skin is not infinitely correctable in one session. How to avoid it Accept that early passes won’t be perfect Learn when to stop Understand that clean technique matters more than repeated passes Knowing when to leave the skin alone is a skill. 3. Inconsistent Hand Speed Why it happens Nerves, lack of muscle memory, and focusing too hard on the needle instead of movement. What it causes Shaky lines Uneven saturation Blowouts in slow sections Light, broken lines in fast sections How to avoid it Practice slow, controlled pulls on synthetic skin Focus on smooth movement, not speed Build rhythm before complexity Consistency beats speed every time. 4. Poor Grip and Body Positioning Why it happens Beginners focus entirely on the machine and forget their body is part of the system. What it causes Hand fatigue Wrist strain Loss of control Long-term injury risk Bad posture becomes chronic pain later. How to avoid it Keep a relaxed grip Avoid locking your wrist Adjust your position instead of forcing angles Take breaks before fatigue sets in If your body is fighting the tattoo, something is wrong. 5. Constantly Changing Machines, Needles, or Settings Why it happens Beginners assume problems are caused by equipment instead of technique. What it causes No baseline for learning Increased frustration Inconsistent results Slower skill development You can’t learn control if the variables keep changing. How to avoid it Pick a simple, reliable setup Learn how it behaves before switching anything Change one variable at a time Consistency is how muscle memory develops. 6. Practicing on Real Skin Too Soon Why it happens Pressure to “prove” progress, excitement, or misinformation online. What it causes Infection risk Legal consequences Permanent mistakes Burned bridges with future shops Real skin is not practice material. How to avoid it Use synthetic skins only Practice repetition, not performance Wait until you are trained, licensed, and supervised If you’re tempted to rush this step, you’re not ready. 7. Ignoring Healing Outcomes Why it happens Beginners focus on how tattoos look immediately, not weeks later. What it causes Misunderstanding technique errors Repeating the same mistakes Blaming skin instead of method Healing tells the truth. How to avoid it Study healed work, not fresh photos Learn what overworking looks like after healing Understand how trauma affects final results If you don’t understand healing, you don’t understand tattooing yet. 8. Treating Machines Like the Skill Instead of the Tool Why it happens Machines look impressive. Fundamentals look boring. What it causes Technique gaps Unsafe habits Reliance on equipment instead of control Machines don’t make artists. Fundamentals do. How to avoid it Prioritize drawing, control, and safety Use machines as learning tools, not shortcuts Remember that skill shows when equipment is predictable The Bigger Picture Most beginner machine mistakes aren’t moral failures.They’re rushing failures. Tattooing rewards patience.Machines punish impatience. If you want to tattoo long-term: Slow down Reduce variables Respect the skin Build skill deliberately Mistakes happen.Locking them in doesn’t have to. Final Word Learning tattoo machines is not about speed, confidence, or posting progress online. It’s about control, safety, and restraint. If you’re willing to take it seriously, you’ll get there.If you’re not willing to wait, the machine will show it.

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SELF TAUGHT SERIES - Teaching Yourself to Tattoo vs an Apprenticeship: What’s Actually Right for You?
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SELF TAUGHT SERIES - Teaching Yourself to Tattoo vs an Apprenticeship: What’s Actually Right for You?

Memphis Mori

Tattooing is more accessible than it’s ever been.Machines, cartridges, inks, and tutorials are easier to find than at any other point in history. That accessibility has opened doors for some people.It has also created real risks when tattooing is treated casually. There isn’t one single path into tattooing anymore. But there are non-negotiables, and pretending otherwise puts people in danger. This isn’t about gatekeeping.It’s about reality. First: Tattooing Is Not a Casual Skill Tattooing involves: Breaking skin Exposure to blood and bodily fluids Permanent alteration of someone’s body Legal, ethical, and health responsibilities This alone means tattooing cannot be approached lightly. No matter how you learn, safety comes first. Always. That means: Understanding bloodborne pathogens (BBP) Knowing cross-contamination risks Proper sterilization and disposal Consent, aftercare, and client safety If you don’t understand these deeply, you are not ready to tattoo a person. Apprenticeships: What They Offer (and What They Don’t) A traditional apprenticeship can provide: Supervised learning Exposure to real-world hygiene standards Accountability Correction in real time Shop culture and client interaction A good apprenticeship teaches more than technique.It teaches responsibility. However, not all apprenticeships are healthy or ethical. Some are exploitative, poorly structured, or outdated. A bad apprenticeship can teach fear instead of skill. An apprenticeship is not automatically good.But when done well, it prioritizes safety, fundamentals, and gradual progression. Teaching Yourself: The Reality (Not the Fantasy) Some people do teach themselves elements of tattooing. Usually this begins with: Drawing and design fundamentals Learning machine mechanics Practicing on synthetic skin Studying sanitation independently This path requires extreme discipline and restraint. Here is the line that cannot be crossed: Never tattoo real skin without proper training, supervision, and licensing. Not friends.Not yourself.Not “just a small one.” Tattooing real skin without proper knowledge of BBP, sterilization, and aftercare is dangerous and unethical. Watching videos does not equal training.Owning a machine does not equal readiness. Safety Is Not Optional (Ever) No matter how you learn, these are mandatory: 1. Study bloodborne pathogens seriously This isn’t a formality. It’s life safety. You need to understand: How infections spread How cross-contamination happens How to protect yourself and others What happens when protocols fail 2. Practice on fake skin only Synthetic skins exist for a reason. Use them. Real skin carries real risk.Permanent consequences aren’t a practice tool. 3. Know your local laws and licensing requirements Tattooing illegally puts clients and artists at risk and can permanently block future opportunities. Ignorance isn’t a defense. 4. Understand that tattooing is permanent Mistakes don’t wash off.They live on someone’s body. That weight matters. So… What’s Right for You? Ask yourself honestly: Do I want a career, or am I curious? Am I willing to wait before touching real skin? Am I prepared to prioritize safety over speed? Am I seeking skill, or validation? There is no shame in choosing to learn slowly.There is no honor in rushing. Tattooing rewards patience.It punishes recklessness. A Final Reality Check There is no shortcut that skips responsibility. If you want to tattoo: Respect the body Respect the risks Respect the craft However you enter tattooing, take it seriously or don’t do it at all. People trust tattooers with their bodies.That trust is earned, not improvised.

About the Electrum Blog:

From tattooing's past to the future, the team of artists and shop owners at Electrum share their perspectives and knowledge on everything tattoo industry.

A few of the things you'll find in our blog posts:

  • Business and Industry Insights: advice and ideas for tattoo business growth, current industry trends and strategies for attracting clients, whilst managing a full schedule.
  • Compliance and Safety: Information regarding regulatory compliance and our mission to produce safe, compliant inks.
  • Product Information: Details about our specific products.
  • Interviews and Events: Discussions and recaps from industry events.
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