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Daegu International School's Student News Site
  • Wednesday, August 12: First Day of School
  • Don't forget your spirit shirts on Friday
The Student News Site of Daegu International School

Jets Flyover

The Student News Site of Daegu International School

Jets Flyover

Permanent make-up tattoos rise in popularity as they allow natural beauty enhancement with fewer risks than surgery.

The pen is mightier than the sword

Serena Travers, Writer February 20, 2024
Despite Korea’s conservative mindset, a niche trend of cosmetic tattoos prevail in the country. From a high school girl to a middle-aged man, individuals stain their eyebrows, tint their lips, and draw hairlines to enhance their appearance. However, even with such a boom, 91% of tattoos in Korea remain illegal. 
A professional tattoo artist inks up a customer in a studio in Seoul. Courtesy of Yonhap News.

The Taboo of Tattoos in Korea

Helen Rho, Jade Lee, Mikey Pierog, and Alyssa Chang February 28, 2022
The tattoo is no modern invention – the first ever attempts at engraving skin can be traced all the way back to roughly 5000 B.C., when the Japanese embellished clay figurines with inked markings. Despite being early adopters of the technique, they aren’t the only civilization that marked bodies with ink. Tattoos are universal: ancient Roman soldiers, sailors during the Second World War, Polynesian warriors, and the Mayans all decorated their bodies as a way of affirming identity, beliefs, and personal values. 
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