Yellow red and blue
It depends.... If you have a light colour, for example, yellow or white, you could cover that with a darker colour like red or blue etc etc. You can not cover a dark colour with a light colour. It just wont work. And you can only successfully cover black with black usually.
red Eternal Inks or Starbrite or Silverback
It could mean you are having an allergic reaction to the blue ink. It could also mean that your tattooists ink was contaminated. It's best to return to your tattooist and seek his/her advice. If you aren't comfortable doing that, seek the advice of a physician. yeah i would say u are having a reaction to it, especially if its a nicer brighter blue
Depending on how "dark" your skin is, generally green, red and black will show up well. Most other colors such as yellow, blue, etc, will not show up as the pigment of the skin is too dark for them to show through. The ink color white will not show up either.
Let me guess...you have a bottle of black ink and you want to do a red tattoo. The ONLY way you can do a red tattoo is to use red ink. No amount of dilution will make black ink red.
No. There is no nickel in black ink. There is a concentration of iron in red ink. The majority of people that are allergic to any ink are the ones that are allergic to iron.
Yellow red and blue
all you have to do is add a tiny bit of black ink into it.
If it is really light purple then maybe, but if not, no. You'll end up with a super dark maroon or perhaps even a slighly plum color.
It depends.... If you have a light colour, for example, yellow or white, you could cover that with a darker colour like red or blue etc etc. You can not cover a dark colour with a light colour. It just wont work. And you can only successfully cover black with black usually.
For this, you will add very small amounts of black ink to the red and thoroughly mix the two until you come to a hue that you are happy with. Other than this, you can simply buy the shade of ink that you are wanting to save yourself the time. If you do mix the ink yourself, write down and keep notes on how many drops you added to the ink that gave you the desired shade so you don't have to go through the process all over again if you are mixing the ink per tattoo as opposed to mixing it by bottle.
I have had a few allergic reactions from myself and other people when I use Smart Tattoo Ink. Real puffy and red skin, sometimes the ink won't stay in, I would sugjest StarBright.
red Eternal Inks or Starbrite or Silverback
Print words with it on a piece of paper and get somebody to read it. It will then be read (red)
'In the black' and 'in the red' originate from classic accounting. Credits are entered in the journal in black ink, and debits are entered in red ink. After they are all totalled together, you are making a profit if your total is 'in the black'. If, however, the total is 'in the red', you are operating at a loss.
You are not supposed to. It's supposed to be blue or black ink only!