Our Superfab Piercer, Jenny, swears by the hot compress. Judging by the way her tattoos heal, I will suggest its use to you as an option. It cuts healing time, but it totally hurts, so it is optional!
- Remove your bandages and wash that ooky layer of serum, plasma, ink, body slime, and A&D ointment with a mild handsoap.
- Prepare a clean washcloth or strong paper towel with water as hot as you can stand. Not burning, just hot, hot, hot.
- Lay the cloth over the tattoo, and leave it on until it cools. Do this 2-3 times, then follow with a nice cool compress. That will feel awesome.
Don't stress if the tattoo doesn't look as bright as it should while it is healing. It will brighten and lighten up as it heals. And, as always, I expect to see you back in 3 weeks to I can take a look at it, and make sure it's healed well, and to decide if it needs any lowlighting or highlighting!

You're a dumbass. A hot compress will pull the ink out of the tattoo and require a touch up (or two) once it heals. I experienced this firsthand, and I'll never do it again. Oh yeah, and it hurts LIKE HELL on a fresh tatt. Way to give bad advice.
ReplyDeleteThe point is that the hot compress pulls the ink out of the upper layers of skin, therefore leaving your body with less gunk to push out (in the form of scabs). A hot compress will in no way affect the ink underneath that. My artist recommended I try this and, so far, my tattoo is healing far nicer than any of my previous ones. So, uh...thanks for proving the point, I guess, Anonymous. >.>
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DeleteI was recommended this method by an artist who has been tattooing over 30 + years. My tattoo healed perfectly & required NO touchup. The colors stayed bright & vivid. Yeah it hurt, just like he said, but it was worth it & from now on the only way I'll do aftercare. btw - I never even scabbed up at all. Great healing method! ;) -J
ReplyDeletedo the hot compress two three times a day it hurts yeah dont be abitch its a tattoo.... and use aquaphor lotion 1 2 times a day it will heal better than any other tattoo you ever have had
ReplyDeleteI started with the "normal" method on my recent ankle tattoo, and it was stiff and uncomfortable. An artist I know who is extremely respected recommended the hot compress and HOT DAMN! After ONE application, that tattoo was MUCH better and immediately started sloughing off that gross top layer of skin and plasma. And honestly, it doesn't even hurt *that* much. In fact, it helps considerably when the tattoo itches. When it gets super itchy, I use the hot compress and it doesn't itch at all for a few hours. =)
ReplyDeleteI started with the "normal" method on my recent ankle tattoo, and it was stiff and uncomfortable. An artist I know who is extremely respected recommended the hot compress and HOT DAMN! After ONE application, that tattoo was MUCH better and immediately started sloughing off that gross top layer of skin and plasma. And honestly, it doesn't even hurt *that* much. In fact, it helps considerably when the tattoo itches. When it gets super itchy, I use the hot compress and it doesn't itch at all for a few hours. =)
ReplyDeleteI realize that this is a super-late comment, but my wife and I would love some clarification on how frequently to use this technique.
ReplyDeleteDo you...
1) Do this method 3x per day (hot-->cold, then cool)?
2) Or, do you do it 3 times in a row (hot-->cold, hot-->cold, hot-->cold, then cool)?
The way I read the instructions are as as #2. But she felt it was #1 after she read it.
We just don't want to do it improperly, you know?
Thanks a lot!
My artist swears by doing a hot compress immediately after the session before wrapping it up. He's been tattooing 30+ years, and started doing this in the last few years. so I've had both styles with the same artist. Best heal ups I've ever had, very little scabbing or flaking with the hot compress sessions. I'll try the additional hot compresses as suggested here with my next one.
ReplyDeleteI love the hot compress! I learned it from my first tattoo when I was 18. Now at 34 all of my tattoos still look brand new!! I also agree with not completely dry healing and the thin layer of A&D.
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