When someone sits with me, I guide them into a space shaped for relaxation and unfolding. I want people to feel that they can simply arrive, breathe, and exist without pressure. Everything in my session is set up with intention, so the body can soften and the mind can open. People often begin to relate to their own emotions in a clearer way, and they let go of what they have been holding for too long.
Tattooing has profound and ancient roots, and I treat it like the ritual it is. I carry this tradition with respect and with all the love I can give. The process becomes a moment of presence, honesty, and connection. Letting pain in ot's about acceptance. It’s about allowing the body to speak, the heart to release, and the mind to rest. Every line, every breath, every pause becomes part of this quiet transformation.
During the session, people enter a deeper place inside themselves. They reconnect, they release, they shift. I focus on creating a safe space where each person can feel held and free at the same time. A space where they can let the process take them wherever they need to go.
I work with vegan materials and the highest hygiene standards, because care is essential. Care for the body, care for the skin, care for the ritual itself.
When the tattoo is finished, there’s a moment of calm that feels almost sacred. A sense of renewal. A new layer of self that rises to the surface.
Every session becomes a small rebirth. And I am grateful for every person who chooses to live that moment with me.
About me
It was my eighteenth birthday when I received my first tattoo kit as a gift. Two very questionable machines, with equally questionable inks and needles, but the moment I opened that little case and held my first coil machine in my hands, everything changed.
I had to fight through my trauma and insecurities, and this art, what I placed on my skin and beneath it, brought me to where I am today.
It’s a process. A struggle. An exchange.
It’s something alive, something that evolves with me and my existence.
It’s something I need in order to survive and something I need to share.
I first studied in art schools, then earned a degree in cinema and multimedia arts. I later completed the course required to get my professional tattoo license, including both the technical and biomedical aspects of the practice. I’m also trained in first aid procedures.
Over the years, I started by practicing on myself , it all began in my teenage bedroom. Then I worked on friends, and gradually gained experience in various tattoo studios.
On a professional level, I’ve had the pleasure of collaborating with people I still deeply respect. I also co-founded and co-directed a tattoo studio , a project I eventually left behind to pursue what truly makes me feel alive: the journey.
I need to mix my art with the cultures I encounter. That’s how I grow. That’s how I create something meaningful.
Sometimes, the most powerful moment in the ritual is the end, when the pain settles, the ink is sealed, and what was once only vision becomes flesh.
You carry it. You bled for it.
There’s a sacred weight to that kind of commitment.
Anyone can get a small tattoo, but that’s a completely different story from dedicating yourself to a full, transformative piece.