AI is killing body art creativity, warns tattooist

Natasha Thompson said an increasing number of clients were requesting AI-generated designs
- Published
When Natasha Thompson opened her family-run tattoo studio in Nottingham almost two years ago, her bookings were full of original designs and creative commissions.
Now she says more and more customers are requesting tattoos generated by Artificial Intelligence (AI), some of which are "impossible" to recreate.
Her studio gets up to 10 AI designs requested each week, a number that Natasha said had noticeably risen over the past few months.
"These designs set unrealistic expectations for artists to copy, and we feel like our human designs and capabilities just aren't good enough," she said.

Natasha runs her tattoo studio with her partner Matthew
The 31-year-old has been tattooing for the past six years and opened Bleeding Hearts Tattoo Studio with her partner, Matthew, in February 2024.
ChatGPT and other AI software can instantly generate images for free from prompts and Natasha says this is already causing issues for her industry.
"Tattoo studios have faced many challenges over the years, along with other small businesses but AI is really changing the creative sector," she said.
"We are finding that when clients bring in AI designs, some can't tell the difference between an AI-generated image and a real one.
"Most of the AI designs come from ChatGPT or Pinterest. The problem with these images is some of them are too detailed for the placement they want, and they won't fade well."
On Pinterest, users can browse both AI and real images when looking for designs.
Natasha said people often arrived with AI images showing detailed designs on fingers that are virtually impossible to replicate in the real world due to the small surface area.
"In some cases, customers get annoyed and irate when we tell them we can't do these designs or highlight that these aren't real pictures - and that's upsetting," she said.

Miss Thompson says she is regularly asked to recreate AI generated finger tattoos like this one
Natasha said for tattoo artists like herself, it was easy to distinguish between real and fake images but she understands it is harder for clients to tell the difference.
"We spot that AI designs have a dreamy aspect to them, and some inconsistencies, like hands with six fingers, and no real skin texture or redness if it's a freshly done tattoo," she said.
"We keep having the same conversations with clients about it, and that is okay, but it's sad that people are gravitating towards AI rather than human creativity.
"As artists, we pour so much into the work we create and advertise, but sadly we do less of our own designs now.
"People need to be mindful that we are humans and artists. After all, we are people, not printers."
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