@Mantis
FYI: I saw this quote.
"Surprisingly, one of the major resurgences of interest in tattoos in Europe occurred among 19th century high society Victorian women (as well as men), after British explorers .. brought back the practice to Britain. .. grew during the 19th century, and even Winston Churchill’s mother had a tattoo .. on her wrist. Queen Victoria was also believed to have had a tattoo of a Bengal tiger.. . From Victorian Europe...to America. In 1897,
(art critic, Margot) Miffin says that an estimated 75% of American society women were tattooed.."
(Black Fire: Women, Tattoos, and the Transformative Power of Body Art )
Whether it was surprising then, it's not surprising now.
The fact that as well as men so many women now naturally and confidently visit tattoo artists is really a reassertion of a very well established historic trend already seen in the 19th century.
(A lot of ppl don't realize this.)
Christians who do realize this often also regard it as providing huge scope for faith, family, Scripture related designs that become easy talking points on subjects that the wearer likely indeed wants to talk about.