You use size B.use a 7 to 9 mag
chances are your outline is done by a 5 or 7 liner (5 or 7 needles grouped tightly together) and your shading/color fill is done with a 7 mag or 14 mag depending on size of tattoo
This is talking about the tip of the needle. Standard is round, i don't know about curved, that's kind of scary, at least I have never heard of them, however there are tapered tips as well, which is probably what your talking about. Mag needles are stacked, if there is no stack they are also called flats. For the artist, tattooing is all about technique, and depending on your technique, you may choose to use a tapered needle, or a standard round.
to do the outline on a tattoo you need a needle called a liner for instance you could use a 14 round liner. now for shading you need a shader which is another kind of needle now you can use a 14 round shader or a 14 flat mag shader that answer your question and an p.s you can get a needle any size they can go as small as 1 all the way up to a 49 flat and so on
Flat? Do you mean in a row or staggered (mag)? I don't use actual flats but mags are best for gray shading and blending color, lose rounds are good for uniform flat color.
look for a mag that haz pics of him at the beach. that's ur proof
A three round liner or five round liner (3RL or 5RL) is the most common but it does depend on the look you are after and the overall effect it has on the tattoo, the colours involved, the shading in the colours if any etc. One liners are also available and used for super fine lines like in portrait eyelashes etc. For tribals and the like it won't matter too much but better with a 5RL so that you can use it to fill the corners before you begin with the shader.
A double stack magnum is a needle arrangement that consists of a bottom layer of needles lined up tightly in a row with a second stack of tightly lined needles on top of the first. The layers have different numbers of needles in them. Common double stack magnum sizes are 5, 7, 9, 11, and 15. The bottom layer has one more needle than the top, so a 5 mag would have three needles with 2 laying on top.
Mags are generally the only needles that one would want to use on a tattoo for coloring, although Round Shaders can be used for saturation nicely. For most graywashing you would want to use a round shader or a mag, but it is up to you as the person doing it to make that determination. I tell apprentices that I teach to think of tattoo needles as paintbrushes, and the rest will follow. You wouldn't use a fine detail brush to fill in a large area of a painting, and that is doubly true for tattoo needles. One of the biggest things that you need to learn when starting is that you really have to pay attention to the amount of trauma you are putting on the skin. If you are just grinding and grinding away at an area because you are trying to color an area of skin that needs a large mag with a round shader, you will be wasting your time and your clients because it will take a long time to heal, there will undoubtedly be scarring, and a good deal of the ink that you are putting in will come out. But with mag needles, generally you may have to turn your power supply up just slightly higher than you would have it for a smaller needle, but depending on how well your machine is tune, this is not always the case. Best of luck.
Usually following a oval or a rice pattern with your movement, dont stop too often, try not to drag them sideways, remember, its going to lay down ink far better then you expect, and never as solid as you wanted. My experience with Mag needles, they tend to heal lighter then I thought they would, about 30%.With a light touch, tight skin, and good movement, a mag needle is a wonderful brush.Remember to stay at an angle to get a good mixed lay both to the skin and to the stroke, stay tight, and take your time.Don't stop moving when you're in the flesh.Bleeding means you're going too deep.Or cutting them.The sides can cut like a razor if dragged improperly in some of the larger groupings.That's what Spider knows.
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If your doing a full color tattoo, meaning just one shade i usually use a round shader, if you want to do transaction from light to dark i use a flat mag. Sizes all depends on what your comfortable with, for a large piece or tribal i use a 25rmag and a 5rs for tighter space. for the tip i use the same liner to fill in. but just try and see what works best for you. This is my advice I have 6 years of experience currently working as a tattoo artist. Some artist will agree or disagree with my advice.