Forum Coordinators: RedPhantom
Poser - OFFICIAL F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 10 3:28 pm)
I'm not a big Asian languages expert, but I'm guessing that the words you mention can be rendered in 1 character each. Japanese uses ideograms, so each character also represents a complete idea. I'm sure someone wil come along with the answer. If not, my bosses girlfriend is Japanese and might be able to help. That'll be in about, oh, 11 hours.
Tell him just to get his testicles pierced, it'll probably hurt less than having all that tatooed into his skin. Ah the absolute stupidity of youth.... If he's so keen on it....tell him to come up with his own damn kanji design....and remind him that he runs the risk of having his body proclaim that he is "dog cheap in this size only" Scarab <-grew a beard as my youthful rebellion....took some time but it didnt hurt and I don't look like a jackass.
Nothing wrong with kanji tattoos ( said the man with an arm load of 'em and a dragon plus a phoenix coming up lol) I might suggest using babelfish to get the kanji and then jazz 'em up a bit. Let your son realise that he will be marked for life so he needs to be sure about it. He should go to the best tattoist he can, check out the artist's work, spend 6 months thinking about it and then think again. Ah the absolute stupidity of youth.... Ah the bitterness of old age... Mon (49)
Depending on where he's going to put it, I'd say give hime some support. You can't tell a 20 year old what to do, but you can sometimes impress upon them the wisdom of one path over another if you approach it calmly. My (then) 17 year old daughter and I got tattooed together. We each have the same tattoo on our left shoulder blade: a stylize version of the voodoo veve (symbol) for the Marassa, the Divine Twins. It's a daddy's girl bonding thing.
I have 12 different Kanji fonts now on my system, but I need specifically the words Imagine and Alto (separate files), and in brush style according to the child. He is going to have it on his shoulder (high). But since I don't know the "picture" series to use for this, they are worthless at this point.
On the positive side, 30 years from now he can tell people they mean something completely different (something that's culturally relavant at the time) and impress them with his wisdom and foresight!
Before they made me they broke the mold!
http://home.roadrunner.com/~kflach/
Attached Link: http://babelfish.altavista.com/
Still here at work ... If you have the fonts on your computer you can use them like this if you've got Win 2K or XP and MSWord. I'll still try to get something cool out when I get home, sometime before the Crap of Dawn. So if all this is too much don't worry about it. Go to http://babelfish.altavista.com/ Type in Imagine and translate from English to Japanese. Copy and past into MS Word. Do the same with Alto. (Alto won't look as cool, as Fyre pointed out, it's a loan word, so they use a different 'alphabet') Then you can change the font to whatever you like best. or, if you're familair with the Windows Japanese Input Method (IME) Open MS Word, Switch to Japanese. Type in "souzou" and hit the spacebar. When the characters above are displayed hit enter, otherwise, hit space again. For alto, type in "aruto", space, and enter when it looks like Fyre's writing above. RyanFWIW, the bottom 2 characters on BluesPadawan's graphic are "suru" which essentially means "to do." I don't personally know the Kanji characters for "imagine" but this adds a nice active touch. Also, the black and white JPEG that's posted can be taken into Photoshop and converted - although it's small and scaling it up would distort it (amount varies depending on how big you resized it).
Before they made me they broke the mold!
http://home.roadrunner.com/~kflach/
BluesPadwan I found the kanji I needed, scaled it up to my arm size in PSP 6, printed it out and then transfered the image to flash paper for the tattoist..lol..then did it again 'cause I did the lettering back to front : By inking the final image you'll give it some personal characteristics, don't forget japanese is just a language and people's writing is always slightly different. The thing about having the image on paper is that you can..lol..put it on your arm to see what it looks like. Oh shut up the lot of you ;) at least I'm being honest. I'm lucky as my nickname is a japanese word with two different kanji that I can pick. If you know any chinese people you could always ask them, the japanese use chinese letters mainly. Mon
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