6.3 C
New York
Thursday, April 25, 2024

Britain’s Most Tattooed Man Spends Thousands Having Artwork Removed… So He Can Start AGAIN (PHOTOS)

Must read

Britain’s most tattooed man – who has changed his name to The King of Inkland –  has spent £6,000 getting some removed because he has run out of space on his skin and wants to ‘start again’.

Matthew Whelan, from Birmingham, has covered his whole body with ink, including an eyeball, but now believes he looks out of date.

The 34-year-old has set aside £6,000 for the painful process of laser removal because he sees himself as a ‘living canvas’ and human ‘art gallery’ that needs to evolve.

Fresh start: Britain's most tattooed man - Matthew Whelan - has spent £6,000 getting some older ones removed because he wants to start again

Fresh start: Britain’s most tattooed man – Matthew Whelan – has spent £6,000 getting some older ones removed because he wants to start again. 

Blisters after some tattoos were removedmore flesh being cleared for a new use

All change: Mr Whelan – who changed his name to The King of Inkland – says the blistering from laser removal is worth it because his collection is out of date and needs refreshing.

 

Mr Whelen, who has also changed his name by deed poll to King Body Art The Extreme Ink-ite, has spent £30,000 on tattoos and had his first at 16 – a British Bulldog.

But he has now decided that after almost two decades he needs to refresh his collection.

lery. After a while the art gets old and people want to see something new and that’s how I feel about my tattoos,’ he said.

‘I’ve had enough of them and I’ve run out of skin to tattoo on – so I thought why not get them lasered off and just start again’.

body artbody art 

Life-changing: The tattoo-obsessive, pictured right before he changed his appearance, had first one at 16 – but says he had a passion for them from the age of nine.

Procedure: The King of Inkland has spent £6,000 getting some removed - having spent £30,000 putting them on in the first place

Procedure: The King of Inkland has spent £6,000 getting some removed – having spent £30,000 putting them on in the first place. 

 

Mr Whelan has spent £6,000 getting £500 worth of tattoos removed on his hand, arm and shin but he still has £30,000 worth of tattoos on the rest of his body.

Over the past two months he has undergone six sessions to have old tattoos removed- a procedure which is painful and lengthy.

He said: ‘I can finally see the skin underneath and the laser process is a gruelling one. My skin is currently blistered- but that’s good because it means it is healing.’

The King of Inkland has now started planning his next set of tattoos which he is anxious to get in place of the ones he has removed.

‘Some of my friends think I’m bonkers, and it might seem odd to some people but to me I am a living canvas,’ he said.

‘I can’t wait for the day to put new artwork in their place. It would be tomorrow if I had my way however I have to wait until the treatment to see when it completely heals.’

Varied: Snakes, scorpions, eyeballs and vampires are among the illustrations on his skin

Varied: Snakes, scorpions, eyeballs and vampires are among the illustrations on his skin. 

Close up of his faceClose up of his cheek

Close up: Mr Whelan’s face is unchanged but tattoos have gone from his hand, shin and arm.

Relaxed: Mr Whelan has been a volunteer for his local Liberal Democrat MP and was a former wrestler

Relaxed: Mr Whelan has been a volunteer for his local Liberal Democrat MP and was a former wrestler. 

Mr Whelan says body modification is a culture, a way of life and almost a religion.

But he also is a political animal, having regularlary volunteered at the office of Liberal Democrat MP John Hemmings in Yardley, in Birmingham. He is also a former wrestler.

He says he has wanted tattoos since the age of nine after seeing his father’s and his uncle’s.

Snakes, scorpions, eyeballs and vampires are among the illustrations he has chosen has one of his eyeballs tattooed black.

‘When I die I want to leave my body to a museum or a member of my family,’ he last year.

‘There’s someone in Canada who has already asked if he can have my skull to use as a paint pot.’

Read More

More articles

- Advertisement -The Fast Track to Earning Income as a Publisher
- Advertisement -The Fast Track to Earning Income as a Publisher
- Advertisement -Top 20 Blogs Lifestyle

Latest article