Seven Tattoo Studio in Las Vegas is a community that revolves around the Black and Grey style, the desire to give their best as artists, each with their own particular inclinations, and to communicate their project to the outside world with all the technology and professionalism available.
So please don’t go calling it a tattoo shop, because that is not the spirit in which this phenomenon on the tattoo scene was born and reared, as Daniel Rocha, who breathed life into it all in 2012, told us in the extended article in the issue of Tattoo Life currently in distribution worldwide.
So here at Seven, our mission is to help create a community of growth to ensure every artist’s brand success. By doing so this allows Seven to improve, and helps as many as possible in even more ways. Just like our Arts of Tattooing program was designed not to bring new people into the industry but to teach artists that have the passion to improve. We believe that as long as we approach our goals with high quality, trust, as well as technology as a guide we will all rise together.
Seven Tattoo Studio is not a walk in type of tattoo shop. We are a Studio and our number one priority is high-quality custom tattoos and service. In a world of average, to stand out is to be great. If it isn’t quality we don’t want it. Trust is equally as important. We focus on building trust with our clients, artists and staff, as well as our community. Our path to reach this goal is through transparency and communication.
Before I opened the studio I saw myself as a colour artist. I then went to do a guest spot at Steve Soto’s Goodfellas in SoCal, and was instantly sucked into the Black and Grey culture. It was like nothing I had experienced before. My style started to evolve. Now that I was a leader in my new tattoo studio we were naturally Black and Grey dominated with a couple of artists that did colour. Now that we have grown, our ratio of artists has definitely leaned to the Black and Grey side.
The team of Seven Tattoo Studio:
Mr. Nobody: large-scale Black and Grey pieces
Ryan Jenkins: high contrast Black and Grey Realism
Pablo Perez: a combination of Realism and surreal elements
Miguel Still Ballin: lettering
Mike Andrade: black and grey with a twist of dark imagery
Hans Amesquita: large scale geometric Blackwork and Realistic Black and Grey
Marco Artist: large-scale Black and Grey Realism
Edson Cano: a wide range of styles
Big L: portraiture and large scale realistic/hyper realistic projects
Janice: cute, fun tattoos
Syd Cryptid: macabre subject matter with heavy black and high contrast