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Category: Blog for Career

New Tattoo Aftercare

Why Tattoos Blur and How to Prevent It

Over years of practice, we have seen hundreds of healed pieces and realized one bitter truth: even the most masterful project can turn into a blurry mess in just one week of improper aftercare.

Many treat the healing process as a mere formality, but for your skin, this is a critical recovery period following a significant intervention. Let’s take an honest look at what happens to your tattoo the moment you walk out of our studio doors.

Phase 1: Immediately After the Session

During the first 24 hours, your skin tries to reject excess pigment. You will notice plasma—a sticky fluid mixed with ink. This is a critical window. If you decide to wipe your tattoo with a regular cloth towel or, worse, “disinfect” it with alcohol, you are making a fatal mistake.

Our standard: only clean hands, mild liquid soap, and single-use paper towels. A regular bathroom towel is a breeding ground for bacteria just waiting for a micro-break in your skin.

The Illusion of “Second Skin” Bandages

Modern protective healing films (often called “second skin”) are an industry marvel, but they create a dangerous illusion. Clients often think: “I’ve applied it, now I can forget about the tattoo for 5 days.” This isn’t entirely true.

If too much fluid builds up under the film, or if you decide to hit the gym, the skin under that protective layer begins to “suffocate.” As body temperature rises, pores dilate, and the pigment literally washes out. The film is not armor; it is a sterile barrier that requires gentle care and zero physical exertion. Pro tip: We recommend removing the film no later than the 3rd day after application.

The Forgotten Enemy

The hardest test is the “Day 5 Itch.” As the tattoo begins to flake, there is an overwhelming urge to “help” the skin renew itself. This is exactly when 90% of mistakes happen.

When you pick even a tiny flake, you pull pigment from the deeper layers where it hasn’t fully settled yet. The result? Gaps and “holes” in the design that will require a painful touch-up. Your only weapons here are patience and a thin layer of professional aftercare ointment.

Why the Sun is Your Greatest Foe

Even if your tattoo feels healed and looks perfect after two weeks, it is still vulnerable. The sun remains the #1 enemy of tattoos for the rest of your life. UV rays break down the pigment structure. If you want your tattoo in Zagreb to look as vibrant in five years as it did on day one, SPF protection must become your daily ritual.

Our Standard

Our experience proves: discipline in aftercare replaces even the most expensive touch-up. Take care of your skin, follow our guidelines, and your tattoo will remain a masterpiece for decades.

Pain Chart

Where Does It Hurt Most and Should You Use Numbing Creams?

“How much will it hurt?” — this is the first question we hear at Tattooed from every first-timer. The fear of pain is often the only thing standing between a client and their dream tattoo. As a studio with a decade of experience, we’ve prepared an honest breakdown of what you’ll actually feel and why “magic numbing creams” aren’t always the best solution.

What Determines the Pain Level?

Pain is subjective, but it generally depends on three factors:

  1. Placement: Areas with thin skin or those close to bones and nerve endings are more sensitive.

  2. Session Duration: By the 3rd or 4th hour, the body’s natural endorphin supply depletes, and even “easy” spots start to feel tender.

  3. Your Condition: Fatigue, hunger, or a hangover can amplify pain sensations significantly.

The Pain Map: From “Bearable” to “Eyes Watering”

We categorize body areas into three levels of discomfort:

Green Zone (Minimal Pain): Shoulders, forearms, outer thighs, and calves. The skin here is thick, and muscle or fat acts as a natural cushion.

Yellow Zone (Moderate): Shoulder blades, back, abdomen, and front of thighs. It feels like intense scratching—perfectly manageable for a long session.

Red Zone (Maximum): Ribs, sternum, elbows, knees, armpits, feet, and fingers. In these areas, the skin is thin, and the machine’s vibration travels directly into the bone or nerve clusters.

The Truth About Anesthesia: Why We Don’t Recommend It

Many clients ask for numbing creams (typically lidocaine-based). However, in the professional industry, we approach them with caution for several reasons:

  1. Skin Texture Alteration: Numbing creams can make the skin “rubbery” or overly saturated. This makes it harder for the artist to saturate the pigment correctly, which can lead to unnecessary trauma and longer healing times.

  2. The “Rebound” Effect: When the cream wears off (usually after 60–90 minutes), the pain returns abruptly and often feels much more intense than if you had started without it.

  3. Impact on Pigment: The chemical composition of some creams can react with the ink, potentially causing the tattoo to look duller or “muddy” after it heals.

How to Stay Comfortable Without Chemicals

Your best anesthesia is proper preparation. The Tattooed standard for a smooth session:

Sleep: Get a full night’s rest. A rested nervous system is your best shield against pain.

Eat well: Have a hearty meal 1–2 hours before your session. Stable blood sugar helps your body produce endorphins.

Hydrate: Well-hydrated skin accepts ink better and heals faster.

Dress comfortably: Wear loose clothing that doesn’t restrict movement or apply pressure.

Tattooed Standard: Your Comfort Matters. We know how to make the process as gentle as possible. Our modern equipment and refined techniques minimize discomfort. Remember: the fear of the pain is almost always worse than the pain itself.

Last updated: March 12, 2026

Permanent Makeup vs. Traditional Tattooing

5 Key Difference

A common misconception is that Permanent Makeup (PMU) is just a “face tattoo.” At Tattooed, we treat these as two distinct disciplines. While both involve pigment and needles, the technology, chemistry, and biology behind them are worlds apart.

Here are the 5 fundamental differences that determine how your art will look today—and ten years from now.

1. Depth of Insertion: The Crucial Millimeters

This is the primary technical distinction.

Traditional Tattoo: Pigment is injected deep into the dermis. This ensures the design stays forever, as cells at this depth do not regenerate like surface cells.

Permanent Makeup: We work in the upper layers of the dermis, near the dermal-epidermal junction. It is precision work: go too deep, and the color turns blue or ashy; stay too shallow, and it disappears within a month.

2. Pigment Composition: Particles and Bases

Under EU REACH regulations, all our pigments meet strict safety standards, but their structures differ:

Tattoo Inks: Contain larger particle sizes designed to “lock” into the skin permanently. They are formulated to withstand decades of UV exposure.

PMU Pigments: Feature a smaller, more finely dispersed particle structure. They are designed to be gradually broken down and carried away by the immune system over time. This allows the color to fade gracefully rather than becoming a permanent stain.

3. Longevity: Eternity vs. Transformation

Tattoo: Created for a lifetime. While it may require a touch-up every 10–15 years, the base remains.

PMU: Designed to last 1.5 to 2 years. Why is this a benefit? Your face changes—skin tone shifts, features migrate, and trends evolve. PMU that fades allows us to adjust the shape and shade to match your aging process and current style.

4. Equipment and Trauma Levels

Tattoo Machines: Powerful devices built to penetrate thicker skin on the body, often using large needle groupings (up to 45 needles).

PMU Devices: Much gentler and quieter. They are engineered for ultra-fine lines and soft shading on delicate facial tissue (eyelids, lips). Trauma is minimal; there is often little to no swelling after the procedure.

5. Healing and Color Stabilization

Tattoo: Once healed, the color becomes slightly more matte as it sits under the skin, but the hue remains stable.

PMU: Goes through a complex “stabilization” phase. Brows may look too dark on day three, disappear on day ten, and finally “bloom” to the true shade by day thirty. This is because the thin layer of healing epidermis significantly affects how the light reflects off the pigment.

Tattooed Standard: Expertise in every layer. At Tattooed, we use only certified, next-generation pigments that guarantee a predictable fade without shifting into unwanted hues.

Last updated: March 12, 2026

Titanium vs. Surgical Steel

Why We Don’t Work with Steel

When it comes to piercing, the choice of metal is not a matter of taste, but a matter of biocompatibility. Let’s break down why “steel” in a piece of jewelry is often a marketing myth that can cost you your health.

The Myth of “Medical” Steel The name “surgical steel” sounds reliable. However, this alloy (Grade 316L) was created for medical instruments, not for permanent wear inside the body.

The Main Problem: Nickel. All steel contains nickel. Through constant contact with lymph and blood, nickel begins to release salts that cause allergies in 15–20% of people.

The Result: The piercing doesn’t heal for months; it stays red, itches, and develops bumps (granulomas). You might think it’s poor aftercare, but in reality, it is your body reacting to the metal.

Why Titanium (ASTM F-136) is the Tattooed Standard We use implant-grade titanium, specifically ASTM F-136. This is the same material used for dental implants and joint prosthetics.

Biocompatibility: The body does not perceive titanium as a foreign object. It does not oxidize or release harmful substances.

Zero Nickel Content: Titanium is hypoallergenic. It is the perfect choice for an initial piercing and for individuals with sensitive skin.

Lightweight: Titanium is twice as light as steel. This is critical for a fresh piercing: heavy steel jewelry pulls on the channel, traumatizing the tissue and slowing down the healing process.

Polishing: High-quality titanium jewelry has a mirror-like finish. Steel often has microscopic burrs where bacteria can accumulate.

Saving Money or Saving Your Health? Steel jewelry is cheap, and that is its only advantage. But the price of a “cheap” piercing often includes doctor visits, expensive ointments, and ultimately, replacing the jewelry with titanium anyway.

We install titanium immediately to ensure your journey to a beautiful piercing is short and painless.

How to Check Your Jewelry? Visually, steel and titanium look similar. But there is a simple secret: titanium is darker with a grayish undertone, while steel is bright white and cold. However, the best way is to trust a studio that values its reputation and is transparent about its materials.

Is your piercing taking too long to heal? It might be the jewelry. Come in for a consultation at our studio in Zagreb, and we will find a safe replacement for you.

Last updated: March 10, 2026

Pain Chart

Where Does It Hurt Most and Should You Use Numbing Creams?

“How much will it hurt?” — this is the first question we hear at Tattooed from every first-timer. The fear of pain is often the only thing standing between a client and their dream tattoo. As a studio with a decade of experience, we’ve prepared an honest breakdown of what you’ll actually feel and why “magic numbing creams” aren’t always the best solution.

What Determines the Pain Level?

Pain is subjective, but it generally depends on three factors:

  1. Placement: Areas with thin skin or those close to bones and nerve endings are more sensitive.

  2. Session Duration: By the 3rd or 4th hour, the body’s natural endorphin supply depletes, and even “easy” spots start to feel tender.

  3. Your Condition: Fatigue, hunger, or a hangover can amplify pain sensations significantly.

The Pain Map: From “Bearable” to “Eyes Watering”

We categorize body areas into three levels of discomfort:

Green Zone (Minimal Pain): Shoulders, forearms, outer thighs, and calves. The skin here is thick, and muscle or fat acts as a natural cushion.

Yellow Zone (Moderate): Shoulder blades, back, abdomen, and front of thighs. It feels like intense scratching—perfectly manageable for a long session.

Red Zone (Maximum): Ribs, sternum, elbows, knees, armpits, feet, and fingers. In these areas, the skin is thin, and the machine’s vibration travels directly into the bone or nerve clusters.

The Truth About Anesthesia: Why We Don’t Recommend It

Many clients ask for numbing creams (typically lidocaine-based). However, in the professional industry, we approach them with caution for several reasons:

  1. Skin Texture Alteration: Numbing creams can make the skin “rubbery” or overly saturated. This makes it harder for the artist to saturate the pigment correctly, which can lead to unnecessary trauma and longer healing times.

  2. The “Rebound” Effect: When the cream wears off (usually after 60–90 minutes), the pain returns abruptly and often feels much more intense than if you had started without it.

  3. Impact on Pigment: The chemical composition of some creams can react with the ink, potentially causing the tattoo to look duller or “muddy” after it heals.

How to Stay Comfortable Without Chemicals

Your best anesthesia is proper preparation. The Tattooed standard for a smooth session:

Sleep: Get a full night’s rest. A rested nervous system is your best shield against pain.

Eat well: Have a hearty meal 1–2 hours before your session. Stable blood sugar helps your body produce endorphins.

Hydrate: Well-hydrated skin accepts ink better and heals faster.

Dress comfortably: Wear loose clothing that doesn’t restrict movement or apply pressure.

Tattooed Standard: Your Comfort Matters. We know how to make the process as gentle as possible. Our modern equipment and refined techniques minimize discomfort. Remember: the fear of the pain is almost always worse than the pain itself.

Last updated: March 12, 2026

Permanent Makeup vs. Traditional Tattooing

5 Key Difference

A common misconception is that Permanent Makeup (PMU) is just a “face tattoo.” At Tattooed, we treat these as two distinct disciplines. While both involve pigment and needles, the technology, chemistry, and biology behind them are worlds apart.

Here are the 5 fundamental differences that determine how your art will look today—and ten years from now.

1. Depth of Insertion: The Crucial Millimeters

This is the primary technical distinction.

Traditional Tattoo: Pigment is injected deep into the dermis. This ensures the design stays forever, as cells at this depth do not regenerate like surface cells.

Permanent Makeup: We work in the upper layers of the dermis, near the dermal-epidermal junction. It is precision work: go too deep, and the color turns blue or ashy; stay too shallow, and it disappears within a month.

2. Pigment Composition: Particles and Bases

Under EU REACH regulations, all our pigments meet strict safety standards, but their structures differ:

Tattoo Inks: Contain larger particle sizes designed to “lock” into the skin permanently. They are formulated to withstand decades of UV exposure.

PMU Pigments: Feature a smaller, more finely dispersed particle structure. They are designed to be gradually broken down and carried away by the immune system over time. This allows the color to fade gracefully rather than becoming a permanent stain.

3. Longevity: Eternity vs. Transformation

Tattoo: Created for a lifetime. While it may require a touch-up every 10–15 years, the base remains.

PMU: Designed to last 1.5 to 2 years. Why is this a benefit? Your face changes—skin tone shifts, features migrate, and trends evolve. PMU that fades allows us to adjust the shape and shade to match your aging process and current style.

4. Equipment and Trauma Levels

Tattoo Machines: Powerful devices built to penetrate thicker skin on the body, often using large needle groupings (up to 45 needles).

PMU Devices: Much gentler and quieter. They are engineered for ultra-fine lines and soft shading on delicate facial tissue (eyelids, lips). Trauma is minimal; there is often little to no swelling after the procedure.

5. Healing and Color Stabilization

Tattoo: Once healed, the color becomes slightly more matte as it sits under the skin, but the hue remains stable.

PMU: Goes through a complex “stabilization” phase. Brows may look too dark on day three, disappear on day ten, and finally “bloom” to the true shade by day thirty. This is because the thin layer of healing epidermis significantly affects how the light reflects off the pigment.

Tattooed Standard: Expertise in every layer. At Tattooed, we use only certified, next-generation pigments that guarantee a predictable fade without shifting into unwanted hues.

Last updated: March 12, 2026

Walk-In Tattoos in Zagreb

Did You Know the Coolest Walk-In Tattoos in Zagreb Are Just 2 Minutes from the Main Square? Street Art on Legs That’s Blowing Up Feeds!

Did you know that in 2026, walk-in tattoo Zagreb is one of the hottest trends among tourists right in the center of Zagreb? Especially if you’re looking for street art tattoo or graffiti style tattoo on legs, arms, or anywhere — TATTOOED Studio at Petrinjska 9 (smack in the heart of the city, only 2 minutes walk from Trg bana Jelačića) welcomes you every day with no appointment needed! Perfect for spontaneous decisions: you’re strolling the center, grabbed coffee on the main square, wandered along Ilica or Tkalčićeva — and suddenly thought, “Let’s get something edgy today.”

Check out this fresh photo: powerful graffiti tattoos on legs featuring street art elements, graffiti lettering, abstract tags, chaotic scribbles, bold black outlines, and an incredible color gradient from turquoise to purple-blue with bright energy splashes. This isn’t just a tattoo — it’s walking street art that looks like you just stepped out of a graffiti gallery in Berlin or New York, but right here in the center of Zagreb.

Why Walk-In Tattoos at TATTOOED Are the Best Choice for Tourists in Zagreb 2026

– Walk-in every day — drop by without booking, especially for simple to medium designs (fine line, graphic, blackwork, color splash, abstract).
– Perfect central location — Petrinjska 9, 2 minutes from Ban Jelačić Square — super convenient after walking Ilica, Tkalčićeva, grabbing coffee on the main square, or shopping downtown.
– Trending styles right now: graffiti lettering, street art, abstract blackwork, vibrant gradients, bold outlines — your tattoo becomes instantly eye-catching and deeply personal.
– Maximum safety: certified artists, premium single-use supplies, European pigments, private booths for total comfort.
– For tourists in the center: massive walk-in flow from visitors — come in, get inked, leave with fresh badass art, and keep exploring Zagreb right away.

Want bold ink like this? Swing by Petrinjska 9 — walk-in is waiting! Or DM us on Reddit to match sketches to your vibe:  https://www.reddit.com/user/TATTOEDOFFICIAL/

Last updated: January 23, 2026

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