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Showing posts with label Celtic Tattoo stencils. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Celtic Tattoo stencils. Show all posts

Celtic tattoos stencils



celtic-snakes-knots-tattoo-stencil


Celtic tattoos - meaning, symbols, and trivia


Opinions often differ when it comes to tattoos. Some love them, others don't. But there are also different attitudes among tattoo fans. For some, tattoos are just body jewelry. For others, every tattoo has a specific meaning.

One tattoo style unites both: Celtic. But what are Celtic tattoos?


  • Celtic - the definition of the term

The term "Celtic" is broad and encompasses all cultures of Northern Europe from the Iron Age to the Middle Ages.


The Celtic tattoo art includes styles from several historical periods and ranges from the Hallstatt period to the La Tene period.


Where is the exact origin of the Celtic tattoos?


Hard to say. Many peoples were involved. In addition, the influence of the Vikings was very strong.

The Celtic tattoo art, or more precisely the Celtic method of tattooing, is one of the oldest in the world.

An extract of the so-called Woad plant was used as the color. The symbols of the original Celtic tattoos are based on metal artifacts, old manuscripts and Pictish carvings in stone.

Despite the great influence of the Vikings with their wild, flowing art, the Celtic tattoo style also retained its spiral and weave patterns.


Celtic Tattoo, in German Celtic tattoo. This means a tattoo in the Celtic style. The style of the Celtic tattoos is often seen as a fashion trend, although the history of this style goes very far back to the Celtic warriors.

Celtic Tattoos Stencils

 


The-Triquetta-celtic-tattoo-stencil


Celtic tattoos: 7 mystical motifs and their meaning


Hardly any other people are as fascinated by us as the Celts. Their magical symbols such as the triskele or the Celtic cross are not only popular jewelry elements in the British Isles, but are also worn as amulets here. Would you like to immortalize your love for this ancient people in a tattoo? I will show you seven Celtic tattoos and their meanings.


Celtic tattoos: symbols and their meanings


We only know of most of the Celtic symbols through the written records of Greek and Roman ethnographers, as well as Irish and British monks. In Ireland, the pagan culture of memory merged with the Christian monastic culture of writing, so that numerous old legends were passed down that every child knows to this day. Here you can find out more about the Celts.


  • 1 The Celtic spiral


The Celtic spiral can be found on burial sites, dolmens and many ancient natural monuments in Ireland and Great Britain. It was often used to represent the sun and is supposed to represent the eternal cycle of life. It is also believed to represent a journey to a higher form of consciousness and symbolize cosmic energy. However, there are no specific traditions for this.



  • 2 the triskele


The triskele is one of the best-known Celtic symbols and is very popular in the Irish-British area as a pendant. The term comes from the Greek and means "three-legged". The three symmetrically arranged spiral arms can stand for different triad in mythology:

Armband Celtic tattoo stencils

 

Armband Celtic knots tattoo stencil


Celtic - the definition of the term

The term "Celtic" is broad and encompasses all cultures of Northern Europe from the Iron Age to the Middle Ages.

Celtic tattoos

The Celtic tattoo art includes styles from several historical periods and ranges from the Hallstatt period to the La Tene period.

Where is the exact origin of the Celtic tattoos?

Hard to say. Many peoples were involved. In addition, the influence of the Vikings was very strong.


Armband Celtic knot tattoo stencil


The Celtic tattoo art, or more precisely the Celtic method of tattooing, is one of the oldest in the world.

An extract of the so-called Woad plant was used as the color. The symbols of the original Celtic tattoos are based on metal artifacts, old manuscripts and Pictish carvings in stone.

Despite the great influence of the Vikings with their wild, flowing art, the Celtic tattoo style also retained its spiral and weave patterns.