Inked for Mom
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CREDIT: Tattoo Flash Book, C.V. Brownell, 1906. Courtesy Nicholas Schonberger.
In the 19th and early 20th centuries, mom tattoo tributes were commonly in memoriam. This design from a 1906 collection is typical in its melancholy imagery (the gravestone) and the relatively complicated design.
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CREDIT: Tattoo Flash Book, C.V. Brownell, 1906. Courtesy Nicholas Schonberger.
Another set of designs from the turn of the 20th century. While Sailor Jerry might have popularized the iconic mom heart, the shape had long been a part of the visual language of tattooing, entwined along with other tattoo classics like anchors and crosses. The word banner could be filled in with a sweetheart's name—or, of course, Mom.
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Image courtesy Flickr user Malia Reynolds of Memorial Tattoo in Atlanta.
Even today, tattoos using similar iconography remain popular.
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Illustration by Art Speigelman. Image courtesy CREDIT: The New Yorker.
Mom tattoos might have been popularized initially by sailors, but by the end of the 20th century, they had permeated American culture so thoroughly that this 1993 Art Speigelman New Yorker cover portraying a mom taking her young son to get inked up scans simply as cute, not transgressive.
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Photograph by Stephen Chernin/Getty Images.
Speaking of cute: A baby and father sport lookalike, classic Americana mom tributes at the 2004 Coney Island Mermaid Parade. (Don't call child protective services; the toddler's not really tattooed.)
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Photograph by Larry Busacca/Getty Images for EJAF.
Traditionally, more men than women have sported tributes to Mom, but that seems to have changed some in recent years. Here, Kelly Osbourne shows off her winged tattoo, which reads Je Vous Aime la Maman.
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Tattoo by Brian Everett. Image courtesy Marisa Kakoulas.
Realistic tattoo portraiture has become popular in recent years, like this black-and-white tribute to Mom.
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Image courtesy the artist, CREDIT: Mike Demasi.
Or this Technicolor mom tattoo, which combines a realistic portrait with more Pop-y, cartoonish design elements.
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Image courtesy Sean Adams/Alex's New Tattoo.
Hearts like this one that bear a closer resemblance to the organ than the symbol are a winkingly modern take on the classic mom tribute.
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Victor Decolongon/Getty Images.
Or there's the simple script tribute, as on this man sporting his mother's name across his skull.
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Image courtesy Flickr user Deanna Wardin.
Perhaps this gentleman was a test-tube baby.
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Image courtesy the artist, CREDIT: Richard Andrews.
Mom tattoos have become increasingly personalized in recent years: This man requested a tribute to his mother designed around her favorite snack, Ruffles potato chips.
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Image courtesy Champion Tattoo, Washington, D.C.
This British woman asked for an image that would remind her of all the tea she and her mother drank together.