Chinese flowers are the only signs of the bounteous nature amidst a frigid and cold Chinese landscape, providing color and breathing life into an otherwise colorless and barren environment. Chinese flowers being multi-hued and of many types is a tempting option for all tattoo lovers. It is simply irresistible to visualize a Chinese flower in full bloom and not have it tattooed on your body. For the immensely style consciousness people of China, Chinese flower tattoos have become an integral part of their lifestyle. Catching up with the Chinese are people from various nations all across the world who also like to have these beautiful tattoos emblazoned on their muscular arms, biceps and triceps.
Flower tattoos are becoming very popular particularly among women who often see their tattoo as an extra accessory. Many women choose to have a tattoo because they think of it as having a piece of artwork that you can have with you wherever you go. Flowers have their own individual meanings and it is a good idea to find the meaning behind the flower that you choose.
An increasing number of women choose the lotus flower as a tattoo. The Lotus flower has a long history and in the Hindu and Buddhist traditions it is seen as a sign of waking to a spiritual reality. Most tattoo artists feel that the lotus flower is emblematic of life in general because if starts off in mud and turns into something beautiful. Many people who have had a rough time of things will sometimes have a lotus tattoo as a symbol of the fact that they are coming out of the other side of trouble. Lotus flowers are also quite important in Japanese symbolism. Japanese tattoo artists will work with lotus flowers, sometimes combining them with koi fish as the two things are often found together in the ponds in front of Japanese temples.
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