Tattoos still taboo at the office
By: Gregory Schmidt — The Associated Press
Issue date: 1/22/04 Section: News
MIAMI _ Once in vogue with bikers and sailors, tattoos achieved mainstream popularity a decade ago, adorning the skin of celebrities, models and professional athletes.
Today, one in every 10 Americans has a tattoo, up from one out of a hundred three decades ago, according to the Alliance of Professional Tattooists, a nonprofit educational group based in Annapolis, Md.
"I've tattooed everybody _ doctors, city councilmen, police officers," says alliance executive director Dennis Dwyer. He's even tattooed permanent eyebrows on the face of an Arizona state legislator. "It's become more socially acceptable."
Indeed, skin art has crept into the white-collar world of lawyers, accountants and high-powered executives. But how socially acceptable are tattoos in the workplace?
Though times have changed, most office workers still want to be discreet when it comes to their tattoos, Dwyer says.
"They want a certain mystique," he says. "They pick an area they can cover with clothing. Common spots are the back, ankle and deltoid. You can show it with a tank top or a short-sleeved shirt. But the neck and face? I'm not sure our culture is ready for that."
Adam Miller agrees with covering tattoos at work. A 29-year-old creative writer at a downtown Miami law firm, Miller had his left upper forearm inked with a portrait of Edgar Allen Poe while he was a junior at Florida State University. Because of the location of the tattoo, he says, he's never had a problem at work.
"I don't even know that they know I have it," he says. "There aren't a whole lot of situations where anyone at work would see it."
Miller cautions other curious colleagues against displaying tattoos at work: "That was one thing former FSU President Sandy D'Alemberte said at graduation _ don't get a tattoo that will show at your job interview."
Danna Can, however, unintentionally flashed hers, and her boss says it probably helped her land the job.
A 30-year-old public relations account executive at DJS Marketing in Coconut Grove, Can got a tattoo of an angel on her inner ankle when she was 17.
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