'She started her business from a need to explore the full breadth of her creative limits and to be a resource and asset to the black community'
https://t.co/MTHW3YRmSq
@lttlinkplayshop@DCKawaiiStyle
cc: @HyattsvilleCDC
Left my substack for a spell on this note … Apprenticeship was sold to us as a power move. But it is devotion - to you, your craft and your teachers/ elders … to your lineage.
But we back to writing. Cuz a new book soon comes. (yippie!)
https://t.co/qApRJWeqie
a lil’ light work from yah fav rare #blackfemaletattooartist - hit my line at littleinkplayshop (dot) com to book. Now booking June & July https://t.co/Y3DOK4TuxF
@harbie___ Indeed, they were primarily for women and served as beautification and a test of bravery before marriage and childbirth
Read more here:
https://t.co/P5WYbEDEhX
In Yorùbá culture, Kóló fínfín (tattoo) is a skin surface marking. Juice derived from a plant or an insect is used
in the kóló fínfín to achieve decorative and symbolic
patterns of animals or geometric shapes on different
parts of the body.