
Henna, also called Mehndi, is the conventional body art that is created with henna paste. The charm of it lies in the fact that it is temporary, painless, time saving, exotic, and colorful. Apart form tattooing, henna is also used as skin and hair conditioner.
Easy to prepare henna paste can take form of skin glowing art designs you have never dreamt of. Just crush the leaves, flowers, and twigs of the henna plant and grind all into a fine powder, mix it with hot water and your paste is ready to apply. Dress your skin with the paste and apply some lemon juice and sugar to bring out its luster in its full glamour.
Remember, the longer you leave the paste, the darker will be the tattoo. Scrap off the dried paste and your tattoo is ready to rock the skin. Avoid black henna, it can cause blisters.
Check out more on Mehndi
IN FOCUS: Henna - The Indian Tattoo Mantra







Comments
Tattoos of Indians (indigenous peoples of the New World) tend to focus on bust portraiture of various Plains Indians groups, notable for their FEATHER headdresses. Whether these images draw on well-known Western art images (such as James Fraser’s famous statue End of the Trail, with the emaciated HORSE mounted by an exhausted Indian brave, both with heads drooping low) or are generic representations of ”American Indians,” they arc romanticized attempts to depict the heroic and tragic struggle of these indigenous peoples to maintain their cultures and even just to survive. They are often intended as poignant and patriotic symbols, and it is ironic that these indigenous peoples did not use portraiture in their own tattoo artwork. Instead their images have been co-opted and incorporated into an Americana of which they were not necessarily willing participants.
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