Blind tattoo artist in Russia impresses customers

38-year-old Igor translates words into Braille before working his magic

MOSCOW:

Like a piano player moving up a scale, Igor Mikhaylov runs his gloved hands along his client's upturned arm, feeling out precisely where he should place his stencil.

The 38-year-old tattoo artist, who is legally blind, is in high demand.

Mikhaylov began to lose his eyesight at the age of eight, the result of a genetic illness. He can perceive gradations in light and can make out the contours of objects. He still remembers what the world around him looks like.

His customers find his tattoos exciting because they demand an imaginative leap of faith.

"The visual images that I have today are in fact being completed with the help of my imagination and my memory. In other words, what I imagine is much sharper than what I can see now," Mikhaylov explained.

Mikhaylov's customers choose a word or phrase, which he translates into Braille. He then tattoos the image onto the skin using a single needle dipped into ink, what is known as a stick-and-poke tattoo.

"How to take a needle to this or that corner, how to find this middle line, which way to use to move a needle in corners – it all reminded me of working with a (guitar) string where these small aspects and peculiarities matter," Mikhaylov said. "I had to develop my own technique."

In between tattooing gigs and music performances, Mikhaylov finds time to win tournament trophies as a member of Russia's national table tennis team for the visually impaired.

A neon sign hanging on the wall by his work station in the Moscow tattoo parlour could serve as Mikhaylov's personal mantra: "Your Comfort Zone Will Kill You".

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