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Showing posts with label Day Of The Dead tattoo stencils. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Day Of The Dead tattoo stencils. Show all posts

Catrina Tattoo (Mexican Day of the Dead Skull) Tattoo stencils

catrina-tattoo-mexican-day-of-dead











Unlike the Catholic religion and its tradition of mourning in the Day of the Dead, for Mexicans, the Day of the Dead is a day of great happiness and celebration. "El dia de Muertos" is a day of remembrance and honor for the dead of every family. The idea is that people live with both death and life and celebrate the peace of the spirits of the deceased.


Celebrations are offered to the goddess, known as the woman of death. La Catrina emerged from the engraving of La Calavera by La Catrina by the Mexican artist Jose Guadalupe Posada, the representation of a skull-shaped lady of high society.



Catrina is a feminine variant of the word Catrín and means a man with good taste and aesthetic common sense, not necessarily someone of the nobility, but the perfect exemplary gentleman. The character of La Catrina wants to remind that even the richest facial death that is the same for everyone. After the figure painted by José, La Catrina has become more and more sophisticated, and today she can be seen both on the day of the dead and in the tattoos under the Mexican skulls. No longer with luxurious hats, but with several flowers in her hair.

Day Of The Dead tattoo stencils

 


Day of the Dead Tattoos, paintings, portraits, murals and altars are all common commemorations of an important celebration in Mexican as well as the traditions of South and Central America. Widely known as Latin America's Halloween, Day of the Dead is a holiday that raises time for those who have fallen before us - a day of remembrance for family members, friends, and loved ones. This special day is synonymous with the Chicano and Latino cultures and has been widely embraced by people from other cultures.


It is not uncommon for people to get tattooed with the names of loved ones who have lost over the years. In many cultures, portraying a lost spouse, child, or friend is an almost traditional thing to do. Consider the many people immortalized in firefighter tattoos or those who are always fondly remembered with military tattoos. And: "This same mindset that created Mexican tattoos designed with loved ones.