Father who has covered 96% of his body in ink shows off his latest extreme inkings – on his eyelids
- In a recent post, the dad-of-one showed off his newest tattoos – two black bats
- READ MORE: Trolls say they dislike my ink but I don’t care
A Canadian man who’s covered 96 per cent of his body in tattoos has revealed his latest project – a black bat on each eyelid.
Remy, who goes by @ephermeral_remy on Instagram, shares his body modification journey with his 216,000 on the platform.
With most of his body covered in ink, the Mirror reports that he has spent more than £75,000 on his transformation over the years, with his current look taking more than 1,300 hours to complete.
In a recent post, the father-of-one showed off his latest creations, and also shared a clip of himself having the bat tattoos done.
He said ‘it’s not bad’, as the artist took the needle to his eyelids, seemingly unfazed by the procedure.
A Canadian man (pictured) who’s covered 96 per cent of his body in tattoos has revealed his latest project – a black bat on each eyelid
A post shared by Remy (@ephemeral_remy)
Captioning the post, he wrote: ‘New eyelid bats by my good friend @tattoosbylee. Good times and better memories, what a fun experience.
‘Everything in me was trying not to open my eyes for this, and while it wasn’t a very painful session, it had its own unique intensity to it.
‘One of the reasons I never tell people “what the most painful area is” is because it varies so much person to person, and somethings just have to be felt to appreciate to begin with.’
As a tattoo artist and manger at Rocky Mountain Tattoo, Remy has plenty of experience with both getting his own ink and tattooing others.
Fans flocked to the comments to compliment Remy’s new additions, with one writing: ‘Looks epic’, and another adding: ‘Omfg I love these!!! They look like eyeliner when the eye is open. I can see a bunch of goth girls copying this.’
Meanwhile, another added: ‘Cant wait to see what you come up with next, this was crazy cool, love it.’
A further commentator chipped in to say: ‘When facial tattoos are well planned out and clean like this, they look good. Love the bats.’
Others were concerned about the pain, asking: ‘Can you compare this pain to other spots around your head & face? Eyelids are something I’ve been real interested in but artists keep talking me out of it.’
Remy wrote of getting the tattoos: ‘New eyelid bats by my good friend @tattoosbylee. Good times and better memories, what a fun experience’
A post shared by Remy (@ephemeral_remy)
With most of his body covered with ink, the Mirror reported that he has spent has spent over £75,000 on his transformation over the years and his look took over 1,300 hours to complete
READ MORE: People share bizarre tattoos that will make you think twice about going under the needle
Remy replied: ‘It’s not painful, just strange, your eye wants to open, and twitches involuntarily.
‘I can honestly say pain wise there’s a lot worse, but it is a very unique one. I enjoyed it.’
Someone else joked: ‘When you think he’s done getting tattoos, and then BOOM another one, these are sick tho.’
It comes just after a woman who had her boyfriend’s name tattooed on her forehead has admitted the daring choice is not real – and claims she was trying to teach people a lesson with her prank.
Polish-born Ana Stanskovsky, who currently lives in Bali, shocked her 587,000 TikTok followers last week when she revealed her bold new inking dedicated to her fellow influencer boyfriend, Kevin Freshwater.
However, all was not as it seemed and as some viewers suspected, the unfortunate inking turned out to be fake.
She told viewers: ‘I want everyone to know that I regret my tattoos and you might regret yours when you get older.
‘As a person who is fully covered in tattoos, I feel like this is my responsibility to speak up, share my experience.’
The move caused backlash within the tattoo community, with one viewer writing: ‘Do your tattoos have meaning? Because mine do. No regrets here’, and and adding: ‘Not all people will regret their tattoos, each to their own.’
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