Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • - Thirty-five percent of Americans between 18 and 45 have 2 00:00:05,035 --> 00:00:07,868 at least one tattoo on their body.

  • Well upon your death, those tattoos are gone,

  • they're only permanent as long as you're alive

  • but then they're gone.

  • We've changed that world.

  • - [Narrator] So all of these tattoos used to be

  • on someone's body.

  • - [Artist] Yes, everyone of them.

  • - [Narrator] Charles Hamm has a lot of tattoos.

  • - I'm the Executive Director and Chairman of the Board

  • of the National Association for the Preservation

  • of Skin Art.

  • We call it NAPSA.

  • You know, I got all these beautiful tattoos

  • and I'm going to get cremated when I die,

  • and everything goes up in smoke.

  • So all the meaning, all the things that people know

  • about me that are close to me are gone as well.

  • - So Charles, which tattoo do I get?

  • - I can't tell you buddy.

  • Most of my upper body's claimed.

  • - [Narrator] So, why would anyone want

  • their tattoos cut off and hung on a wall

  • for posterity?

  • This is Shelly Krajny.

  • She's one of NAPSA's first members.

  • - I was really nervous, um, when I first got my tattoo done

  • to show my mom.

  • The first thing that she said when she saw it was that, like,

  • "It's so beautiful, I wish that I could like hang

  • that on my wall."

  • This is on my body forever.

  • Now, it can be part of someone else's story forever

  • thanks to NAPSA.

  • - [Narrator] Here's how it all works.

  • Within hours of a person's death,

  • NAPSA will mail a preservation kit

  • to their family.

  • The mortician will then cut off

  • the tattooed skin and apply NAPSA's

  • embalming solution.

  • The tattoo is then mailed to NAPSA's headquarters

  • inside this office complex just outside

  • of Cleveland, Ohio.

  • This is where they finish processing the tattoo.

  • It's no longer skin now.

  • It has the look of leather but it feels

  • like parchment paper.

  • Finally, NAPSA sends the framed tattoo

  • to the beneficiary.

  • - Everybody thought I was crazy at first in my family

  • but they quickly came to realize this is a beautiful thing,

  • and they've claimed their tattoos.

  • I have a gorilla on my chest.

  • And gorillas are known for protecting

  • all their females in their group,

  • and my wife's name resides under that.

  • That's my way of saying that I'm protecting my wife.

  • This gorilla's overlooking her.

  • So upon my passing, that put in a frame,

  • sitting above a fireplace, will remind her of me

  • every time that she looks at it.

  • And that's really what this is about.

- Thirty-five percent of Americans between 18 and 45 have 2 00:00:05,035 --> 00:00:07,868 at least one tattoo on their body.

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it