KevinCunningham
Member
- Joined
- Feb 20, 2022
- Messages
- 74
Howdy engravers
I was trained as a tattooer and have 25 years experience- I’m coming up on one year total cutting with gravers so everything is still kinda shiny and new to me.
As a tattooer one fairly hard rule is that with the client’s body standing and relaxed all tattoos should face forward. A chest piece or front of thigh or whatever is a gray area, but a lady head in profile that faces backward on the shoulder for example is a RED FLAG that the tattooer wasn’t properly trained.
In gun engraving there are plenty of times where a game scene is cinematic and the composition faces out to be viewed from the side, and may even tell a story. These usually look great.
Lots of times though I see animals in profile facing the rear of a rifle or shotgun and it always screams wrong to me. Is this because of my tattooer training? I’ve seen engravers talk about running borders being backwards and a mistake, but in all my engraving specific art books I haven’t seen it mentioned.
Obviously this is art, not math, and rules are made to be broken but for example check out this showstopper in an auction ad on the back cover of a magazine. Perhaps forgetting the back to front flow of a firearm the animals are going right to left like Hebrew or Japanese to imply coming toward the ready rifleman to meet their end? Objects implying speed or movement in western art are often figured left to right since our eyes are trained that way from reading.
Anyway, I thought this was an interesting topic and this is usually a good place for informed diacussion.
I was trained as a tattooer and have 25 years experience- I’m coming up on one year total cutting with gravers so everything is still kinda shiny and new to me.
As a tattooer one fairly hard rule is that with the client’s body standing and relaxed all tattoos should face forward. A chest piece or front of thigh or whatever is a gray area, but a lady head in profile that faces backward on the shoulder for example is a RED FLAG that the tattooer wasn’t properly trained.
In gun engraving there are plenty of times where a game scene is cinematic and the composition faces out to be viewed from the side, and may even tell a story. These usually look great.
Lots of times though I see animals in profile facing the rear of a rifle or shotgun and it always screams wrong to me. Is this because of my tattooer training? I’ve seen engravers talk about running borders being backwards and a mistake, but in all my engraving specific art books I haven’t seen it mentioned.
Obviously this is art, not math, and rules are made to be broken but for example check out this showstopper in an auction ad on the back cover of a magazine. Perhaps forgetting the back to front flow of a firearm the animals are going right to left like Hebrew or Japanese to imply coming toward the ready rifleman to meet their end? Objects implying speed or movement in western art are often figured left to right since our eyes are trained that way from reading.
Anyway, I thought this was an interesting topic and this is usually a good place for informed diacussion.