Get Inked: Tattoo Parlors of New York City

New York has had an uneasy relationship with the tattoo culture. When an outbreak of hepatitis swept the city in 1961, the authorities were quick to blame the city’s tattoo parlors. Despite the fact that
Get Inked: Tattoo Parlors of New York City
 many tattoo parlors used sterilization machines, the health department shut down the entire industry, and for many years, it was practically impossible to get a tattoo in New York City.

Since the health department finally lifted its ban, tattoo parlors have sprung up in every part of the city. Some of the world-renowned tattoo artists live and work here – but there are also plenty of hacks out there. Heavy regulations ensure that the parlors of today are safe and clean: artists are required to use disposable needles, and the premises are inspected regularly. But if you are thinking of getting your first tattoo, how will you know a hack from a DaVinci?

Andromeda Tattoo
33 St. Marks Place, New York, NY 10003, (212) 505-9408

Thanks to its location in the heart of the East Village, Andromeda is one of the more famous parlors in New York City. Not quite the by-appointment-only parlors of tattooists to the stars, Andromeda does great work that fits a regular person’s wallet. Its artists, weird and funny, some obsessed with squirrels, others with strange ideas about UFOs, manage to add hilarity to the ritual of pain.

The place is spotless – but for all its sterile environment, it retains the atmosphere of cheerful rebellion prevalent in tattoo culture.

Triple X Tattoo
46 West 36th Street, New York, NY 10003, (212) 736-3001

A good tattoo artist has to combine the talent of a painter with the knowledge of an anatomy professor. The skin is a moving, breathing, aging canvass – and to paint on it successfully, the artist must know the intricacies of its qualities.

As I rotate my wrist, turning my hand this way and that, my skin moves and stretches – and with it, the picture tattooed on it. Michael, the young star of Triple X, explained this to me, and then proceeded to spend half an hour arranging the song letter by letter around my wrist.

Related information
In 1961, tattoo parlors were unjustly blamed for the outbreak of hepatitis. Even though the outbreak was later traced to a New York hospital, tattoo parlors remained illegal in New York for many years.