Taboo in tattoos: How do we rate the beauty of a person when they have ink?

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Tattoos are a millennia-old practice estimated to adorn up to one in four people in the world today. ilovetattoos, Pixabay, CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)
Tattoos are a millennia-old practice estimated to adorn up to one in four people in the world today. ilovetattoos, Pixabay, CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)

Do we still judge people with tattoos? Well, German researchers suggest that the general population finds people with tattoos to be less beautiful than their clean-skinned peers, but younger people, tattoo artists and people with body art tolerate more ink, unless it's on the face. The team pulled together close to 500 people and asked them to rate the beauty of photos of people with increasing degrees of temporary tattoo coverage, starting at no tatts all the way up to extreme coverage with face ink. They found that overall, people rated the images highest when they had no tattoos at all, and rated them lowest when they had facial tattoos. Additionally, people under 50 rated the extremely tattooed images higher than the older respondents.

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From: PLOS

Tattoo or not tattoo: Testing the limits of beauty in body art

Younger people, tattoo artists and those with body art can tolerate more ink, but facial art is the exception, German study reports

German survey respondents rated images of tattooed models as less beautiful than images of the same models with no tattoos, however younger people, tattoo artists and those with body art tolerated more ink, according to a study published in the open-access journal PLOS ONE on December 11, 2024 by Selina M. Weiler and colleagues from Helmut Schmidt University/University of the Federal Armed Forces Hamburg, Germany.

Tattoos are a millennia-old practice estimated to adorn up to one in four people in the world today. The 1950s saw a resurgence of this once-marginalized medium in Western culture, with widespread acceptance blossoming into the 1990s. Though scientists have inquired after body art’s impact on perceived personality traits, the relationship between tattoos and perceived beauty is unclear.

Weiler and colleagues recruited 487 German adults to rate images of two models with various degrees of temporary tattoo coverage: baseline (no coverage), light, moderate, heavy, extreme and extreme+facial. The tattoos followed natural, geometric and animal-inspired designs and did not include writing, religious or political text. Participants rated the perceived beauty of each image using a 7-point Likert scale.

The images with no tattoos were the highest rated overall, while images with facial art were the lowest rated.

Weiler and colleagues examined three characteristics among the participants: age (used as a proxy for social norms around tattoos), existing tattoos and tattooing expertise (i.e., at least 7 years of experience as a professional tattoo artist). Their observations included:

  • Respondents younger than 50 rated the extreme images as more beautiful than did older respondents.
  • Tattooed participants chose higher beauty ratings for more tattooed models.
  • Experts rated images with heavy, extreme, and extreme+facial tattoos higher than did nonexperts.

Facial tattoos received the least positive reception overall — even among the experts, who ranked the extreme coverage option highest as a group.

According to the researchers, these results may suggest that tattoos’ modern cultural acceptance has propelled the art form beyond “the height of [its] fascination.” Future research may delineate more than two age categories, capture a more complete spectrum of tattoo designs and explore the possible influence of factors like sexual orientation.

The authors add: “The extent of tattoo coverage alter aesthetic appreciation of human stimuli, with responses varying by social norms, tattoos status, and expertise.”

Journal/
conference:
PLOS ONE
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Helmut Schmidt University / University of the Federal Armed Forces Hamburg, Germany
Funder: The author(s) received no specific funding for this work.
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