Developed by Skin Motion™, Soundwave Tattoos uses an augmented reality app to combine both art and technology to create tattoos that can be played back from a mobile device.
You simply take any audio recording (up to one minute) of your loved one’s voice, a favorite song, or even your dog’s bark, and upload it to the Skin Motion app, available for both Android and iOS devices.
The app then generates a soundwave pattern that can be taken to a certified Skin Motion tattoo artist from Skin Motion’s Artist Network, who will ink it somewhere on a flat surface of your body. The soundwave tattoo can not curve around body parts, so placement is very important.
These tattoos artists need to also be certified by Skin Motion in order to make sure they thoroughly understand the technology, it’s limitations, and how that applies to tattoo placement, size, and changes to the design based on customization or elaboration per person.
For even further creative freedom, the soundwave can be embedded as negative space within another picture as well. Some examples include filling the soundwave shape in with color, leaving it as an outline, or putting design elements around the outside of the soundwave outline.
Soundwave tattoos use a form of augmented reality known as “marker-based” augmented reality. This type of augmented reality uses a camera an a type of visual marker, such as a soundwave, to produce a result only when the marker is sensed by a reader.
Marker-based applications use a camera on a mobile device to distinguish a marker away from any other real world, physical object. Distinct, but simple patterns, such as a QR code, are used as these markers because they are easily recognizable, and do not require a lot of processing power to electronically read.
The soundwave tattoo idea came about when two friends decided to tattoo the opening lyrics from the song, “Tiny Dancer,” by tattoo artist Nate Siggard. As the friends were leaving Nate’s shop, Nate’s girlfriend said how it would be great if a person could actually listen to the tattoos. From that moment, Nate relentlessly set out to make this idea a realization and created a concept for himself by using his girlfriend’s voice saying “I love you,” as well as their 4-month old baby’s laugh, and posted it to Facebook.
The video then started attracting people from all around the world, and thus the Skin Motion app was born, launching in June 2017.
The goal of this company is to expand this innovation on a global scale by partnering with tattoo artists and tattoo shops all over the world, as well as monetize their efforts through their subscription service.
One example of this amazing technology at work is through Caitlin Hallock, 28, who memorialized her late mother via a soundwave tattoo in order to hear her every day.
Caitlin lost her mother suddenly in December 2015 from a heart attack. Devastated, she got several tattoos done to remember her, but in late 2018 when her husband and tattoo artist, Shane, told Caitlin about augmented reality soundwave tattoos from his researching of new designs, she knew this was the one she had to get.
After scouring every piece of audio that she could find for one that was suitable, she stumbled across a video of her 24th birthday party, where she could hear her mom in the background say, “Happy birthday, girl,” and knew this was the one.
Shane registered to become a certified artist, and helped Caitlin in tattooing her soundwave tattoo. Caitlin now listens to her mom’s voice at least twice a day, and often shares it with her 4 children, who will never forget the sound of their grandmother’s voice.
Many more similar stories can be found on Skin Motion‘s site.
The tattoo community has received the idea positively since its launch, with praise surrounding integrating art with today’s technology to create more memorable tattoos. It is a creative way to keep something that you cherish with you at all times, keeping true that tattoos are works of art that hold value and meaning.
Whether it’s through our mobile devices, our glasses, or even our skin, augmented reality technology is innovating how we interact with the world. Before long, augmented reality will seamlessly blend in as a way of life and forever changing what it means to experience “the real world.”
Virtual reality creates safe and immersive environments that help police officers hone their skills, equipping them with new ways to…
YOGES has an innovative take on adapters for Quest 2 controllers, including a unique removable piece that turns both controllers…
Live XR theater started during the pandemic, but it’s more than a way to avoid a crowd. The medium allows…
Applying real-world laws to XR spaces will require governments, businesses, and institutions to work together for effective regulation.
Alien Invasion AR FPS does a lot with relatively little as it hooks me into the story through a combination…
AI is like any tool - it makes the job easier but only if you know how to use it.…