tarkoittaako nuo leffoissa/sarjoissa nähtävät hämähäkin seitti-tatuoinnit joita joillain on kaulassa jotain? onko ne jengitatuoint

  • Viestiketjun aloittaja Viestiketjun aloittaja utelias
  • Ensimmäinen viesti Ensimmäinen viesti
U

utelias

Vieras
tarkoittaako nuo leffoissa/sarjoissa nähtävät hämähäkin seitti-tatuoinnit joita joillain on kaulassa jotain? onko ne jengitatuointeja tai onko niillä jokin symbolinen merkitys?
 
Ne ovat luultavasti tribaaleja http://groovytattoo.wordpress.com/category/tribaalit/

Aika yleisiä taitavat olla, varsinkin naisilla. Jengit taitavat käyttää niitä myös, kuten muitakin tatuointeja. Elokuvissa ne ovat yleensä merkkinä johonkin ryhmään kuulumisesta.
 
Mä olisin valmis tekemään aika karkean yleistyksen. Eli siisti, selvästi ammattitatuoijan tekemät seitit ei tarkoita yhtään mitään, mutta karummat, sen näköiset että ne on takonut joku linnavenkula, sitten jo varmasti jotain merkitsevätkin. Mitä, sitä en lähde spekuloimaan. Ja varmasti myös se, missä kuva sijaitsee, voi tarkoitta jotain.
 
esim. sarjassa NCIS on Abbs'llä tuollainen tatuointi niskassa mitä tarkoitan ja monessa jenkkisarjassa on yksi ja sama näyttelijä jolla on samanlainen tatuointi kaulassa
 
mielestäni on turha edes lähtee vaivaan päätänsä etenkään jenkkien jengitatuoinneilla! siellä on vice lords, latin kingsit, ms 13, cripit ja bloodit yleensä noissa leffoissa mutta MYÖS satoja ellei tuhansia muita jengejä joista me suomen pojat ja tytöt ei tiedetä mitään joten aika turhaa (ainakin itse ajattelisin) on spekuloida sellaisia asioita. voi olla että tällä hämähäkinseitti-tatuointi jutulla kuitenkin on juuri tällainen "suoritettua tappoa" kuvastava merkitys JOISSAIN maissa kuten eräs täällä jo sanokin mutta en usko että se on minkään jengin oma tatuointi josta heidät tunnistaa. mutta parempaa vastausta tähän kysymykseen saa toki etsiä, vaikka helpompaa olisi aluksi ottaa selvää tän oman maan alamaailman tatuoinneista jos erityisempää kiinnostusta niitä kohtaa on :)
 
Kyllä google tietää,

The spiderweb on the elbow started out around the 40s as a aryan gang symbol meaning that you killed a minority. usually each ring meant how many years they were locked up. obviosly in 70 years, things change. im Aztec and Native American and i have a spiderweb on my elbow with a clock in the middle. these days the meaning is pretty simple. it is a symbol of struggle. some struggle with drugs, some struggle with the system, and some just struggle with everything in life. Sometimes the harder you try to fight it, the more you get tangled in life's web. whoever wrote below "it means what you want it to mean" is obviously the only genius in here, because its no longer a symbol that belongs to nay group or lifestyle. especially since youve got idiotic Nazi Lowriders that recruit Latinos. "We're gonna hate everything thats not white, but we'll make an exception cuz we gotta get drugs from somewhere" How bout just try to be an American and a normal member of society. i say send them all to Iraq and let them feel what is is to be hated for being an American and having nothing to do with race. sure would make me and my boys feel better.

Bikers and others have the tattoo done to signify how sometimes in life we caught in the web of fate. In other words you get caught in situations you can not control.

* Depending on where you look, it's either a prison tattoo showing that you've served time or it's a white supremacy thing. Mostly, I've met people who used it simply to show that they've served time.

* on the elbows itis sometimes a skinhead tattoo not just racist skinheads but anti racist, gay, and political skinheads use it too

* I was just discussing this tonight and apparently it's a tat, generally done in PRISON, which means you're in for murder.

* It's traditionally a prison tattoo. Lifers and those with long sentences would get it to signify that they were locked up for so long, they had cobwebs, get it?

It has been known as a racist thing or each line of the web stands for how many years you did in prison.

* You've killed, hate or hit a visible minority.

* Drug or substance abuse addiction.

* it means uve bashed a rival gang member to near death each ring means how many they have bashed (jail/street gang tat)
* Jail Time (prison tat)

* It means what you want it to mean.

* It means that you are trapped somewhere.

* It means you have a tattoo of a spider web on your elbow.

* Usually, the old-fashion spider web tattoo is placed on the elbows. It's an old school prison tattoo, meaning you did time or that you killed someone in prison. It can be a hate-symbol worn by racists, who are proud to have killed someone from a different race. Another meaning is 'you're dealing with a dangerous person with a gun'. Nowadays, it's used in the punk scene for example, it means 'Caught in the system'. Also used in new school and old school-style tattoos just because it looks really nice.

* Among gang members, this tattoo was a code, readable by other gangsters in prison and on the outside, showing that the bearer had served serious time in the penitentiary. In some parts of the country the same tattoo meant that the wearer had killed a member of a minority group. In fact, James Burmeister was convicted in 1995 of killing a black couple, an act he committed solely because he wanted to wear the spider web tattoo that was popular among members of the Aryan Brotherhood. But while this tattoo holds powerful and specific significance for gang members, to the middle class that has co-opted the symbol it has no meaning beyond the idea that it is simply "cool." Thus Robert Van Winkle (formerly famous as the rapper Vanilla Ice) and Lars Frederiksen of the band Rancid both sport spider web tattoos. In a 1996 episode of Melrose Place, one of the characters gets drunk before going to tattoo parlor and wakes up the next day with a huge spider web tattooed on his elbow. The spider web may be the most common prison tattoo to be assimilated by the middle class, but it is not the only one. People who have no affiliations to or interest in gangs have had themselves tattooed with Old English script on their chests, backs and arms, a style that used to be exclusive to gang members. These non-gang-member tattoo wearers believe they can imbibe the "gangsta" aura without having to lead a gangster life. Thus Dody Lira, a highly tattooed but law-abiding 25-year-old from Dallas, Texas, is proud to have several tattoos that are in the same style as gang tattoos, including a large tattoo of his own last name on the outside of his left calf in Old English lettering. "They have influenced me, by planting a symbolic badge that can be worn for everyone to see, for the rest of my life," he explained. "It all ties in with symbolism-they all stand for something; it's universally known." But he acknowledges that there are some gang tattoos he would not adopt, saying, "You see a dude with 187 on his forearm, he's probably a killer." Still, he sees no conflict between staying within the bounds of polite society while sporting gang-style tattoos. "Yuppies also drive Harleys," he explains. "That doesn't mean that they are beer drinking, wife smacking bikers."
 
http://www.soaw.org/presente/images/stories/thumbs/ms13.jpg tossa on esim. just ton tunnetusti maailman vaarallisimman jengin (ms 13) joku jengilläinen tatuointeineen ja veikkaan että jokaisella ton ihoon hakatuista kuvista tarkottaa jotain kyseiseen jengiin liittyen, joten jo pelkästään tässä kuvassa on jokaiselle kyselijälle tulkittavaa loppu elämäks :D en usko että tästä aiheesta tarvii keskustella kovinkaan paljoa.
 

Yhteistyössä