Pip: Robert’s Snap Spot is where a camera — or in today’s case, an iPhone 4 — becomes a way of reading people, places, and the stories they carry on their skin.

Mara: Robert J Jr. brings us into tattoo culture this episode, exploring how ink on the body becomes a form of personal history. Let’s start with what it means to photograph something that was never meant to be decoration.

Tattoo Photography: Written on the Skin

Pip: The premise of this segment is a real question: what does it take to photograph a tattoo and have the image carry the same weight as the art itself — not just document it, but honor it?

Mara: The post frames tattoo culture as something layered and intentional, and it opens with a quote from Walter Curlewis Photography: “Your body is a canvas, and your tattoos are the story painted on it.”

Pip: That framing shifts the whole project. If the body is a canvas, then photographing a tattoo isn’t portraiture and it isn’t product photography — it’s something closer to documenting a living artwork with its own biography.

Mara: The New Orleans back tattoo captured here is the concrete example. Shot on an iPhone 4, it’s a reminder that the gear is almost beside the point when the subject has that kind of presence.

Pip: An iPhone 4, for the record, is old enough to have its own origin story — which feels appropriate given the subject matter.

Mara: The post pairs that image with a second line: “Ink runs deeper than skin — it tells the story of the soul.” That’s the emotional argument the whole series is building toward. Tattoo Photography: Written on my Heart (and) Back isn’t treating ink as aesthetic. It’s treating it as autobiography.

Pip: And photographing autobiography requires a different kind of attention — you’re not just composing a shot, you’re being trusted with someone’s history.

Mara: That’s what the Tattoo Series as a whole seems to be after: not a catalog of designs, but a record of why people choose to write on themselves permanently.

Pip: Which makes New Orleans a fitting place to start — a city that has never been shy about wearing its own story out loud.

Mara: The images and the quotes together make the case that the camera, whatever camera, is just the tool. The subject is always the meaning underneath.


Pip: Skin as autobiography, New Orleans as backdrop — there’s a whole archive of untold stories in a single frame.

Mara: Next time, more of what the city and the people in it choose to show.

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