Inked · Token Detail
Inked #71
Inked is a 444-piece generative collection that treats tattooed skin as a living gallery wall.
Each artwork focuses on a real-world tattoo placement — forearms, hands, shoulders, backs, ribs, necks, ankles and more — photographed or rendered in a photoreal, cinematic style. Traits define body area, ink style, theme, scale, colour palette, setting and lighting, allowing the system to generate a broad diversity of designs and subjects while keeping the mood cohesive: respectful, intimate, artful.
Skin tones range widely and intentionally, celebrating global diversity and how ink behaves across different complexions. Designs include botanicals, animals, sacred symbols, constellations, geometric forms, script and abstract marks. The result is a portrait series that balances realism with curation, making each token feel like a still from an unseen tattoo photography book.

Token information
- Collection
- Inked
- Token ID
- #71
- Subject
- Man
- Skin Tone
- Medium
- Placement
- Shoulder
- Tattoo Style
- Line and Dotwork
- Tattoo Theme
- Botanical / Flowers / Leaves
- Ink Palette
- Black Ink Only
- Setting
- Plain Wall with Soft Texture
- Lighting
- Soft Natural Window Light
- Rarity
- Common
Owner information
More from Inked
Other Collections
Chairs




Chairs is a study in sculptural absurdity: a museum-grade exploration of chairs that push beyond functional design into expressive, impractical, and architecturally playful form.
Each work is a hyper‑photorealistic portrait of a chair behaving more like a sculpture: a seat that bends too far, loops into itself, contradicts its own engineering, or performs gestures no practical furniture would ever attempt.
The result is a collection where fine‑art photography meets conceptual design, blurring the boundary between object, artwork, and architectural experiment.
Spectra




Spectra is a study of matter revealed as light.
Each work is rendered as a long-exposure spectral field — a restrained, museum-grade image where compounds and materials appear as bands and lines held against deep charcoal. These are not diagrams. There are no axes, grids, labels, or legends. Only the quiet evidence of a signature.
Across the collection, four regimes are held in tension: hydrocarbons, nuclear fuels, clean-energy materials, and metal alloys. The politics is embedded in comparison, not slogans — warmth versus precision, diffusion versus containment, abundance versus legacy — expressed only through light.
Glitch




Glitch is a chronicle of generative destruction — a moment where order dissolves and creation is forced to rewrite itself.
Each image captures the instant a system breaks open, revealing the raw mechanics of collapse: torn planes, corrupted colour,
fractured geometry and unstable architectures dragged through the turbulence of a failing render.
This is not destruction as decay, but destruction as generation: new forms born through rupture, error and computational stress.
Glitch is the story of a machine unmaking itself — and in doing so, discovering unexpected beauty in the wreckage.


