MEET THE CREATIVE

A Tatoo Revolution

An artist tells us how Procreate changed her industry for good.

Procreate

Sketch. Paint. Create.

View

The tattoo industry is changing. What used to be a world of tracing paper and pencils is going digital—which means those sketch-filled notebooks have been replaced by iPads.

That’s thanks to apps like Procreate, which let artists overlay their designs on photos of their clients’ skin, showing them instantly what the finished product will look like.

Holly Ellis owns the Idle Hand tattoo parlour in downtown San Francisco. Like many artists, Ellis was initially hesitant to adopt Procreate, but she was won over by the app’s convenience and eco-friendliness.

“I used to do everything on paper,” she says. “If I was doing a sleeve or something big, I’d start with Photoshop but eventually still wind up with a pile of paper. It’s very cool how Procreate eliminates that.”

Like all the artists at her Idle Hand parlour in San Francisco, Holly Ellis has become a Procreate convert.

Today, every artist at the bustling gallery uses Procreate and their work is on display on nearly every square inch of available wall space (which they’re pretty much out of). We sat down with Ellis at her makeshift office table to find out how Procreate has changed the way she approaches her art.

How do you begin an initial meeting with a new client?

First I’ll bring out the iPad and show what I’ve got in mind. I don’t like to email drawings; I like to have people come into the shop. 

If I need to see how a design is going to fit, sometimes I’ll print it out so I can wrap the paper around their arm or wherever. But if I’m, say, squeezing something in between a lot of other tattoos, it’s helpful to just take a photo (of the body part) and put it on my iPad. Or if I’m doing a colour study, I can take a picture of a client’s whole arm, then just colour on top of that.

How else has Procreate made your job easier?

I can take pieces of different images and work with them together. In the past, I’d have to find a picture of the first thing, then a picture of the second thing, then tape everything together to trace it. If I had to blow up or shrink a picture, things could pretty easily get distorted. 

I can stretch images in Procreate too, which really helps. You can’t do that with paper.

This intricate tiger tattoo started in Procreate.

Does being able to see a mockup on an iPad ever change a client’s mind?

Sometimes. And sometimes people will have more input after seeing something. And sometimes the drawing maybe won’t look great, but they’ll trust me and know where I’m going with it.

“I used to do everything on paper,” says Ellis. Not anymore.

How do you keep track of all the work you’ve done?

I have all my drawings stored on my iPad, so I can reference them if I want to reuse something or need to be inspired. In traditional tattooing, a lot of the imagery is the same; so you can use the foundation of a design, like a girl’s head, to create something new. It’s better for my clients that way—they’re not waiting around for me as much!