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Thursday, October 19, 2006

to show it or cover it up........(or take it out whichever the case may be)


interesting. of course i can relate to this. i work in an very large international insurance company. i am inked. MOST are hidden but i do have two small pieces on the insides of my arms, two larger pieces on the outside of both of the bottoms of my legs and one on the inside of my right ankle that can be seen (on a VERY RARE basis) at work. i wear pants 99% of the time, even if i have a dress on, i'll put 'em on under it. in the summer though, i do wear short sleeves and the insides of my arms can be seen. the pants lengths are shorter too (ya know those clam diggers........) so the ink on my lower legs can be seen too. in additon i have a tiny stud in the right side of my nose. i used to remove it for work, but i gave that up long ago. i really don't think most people notice it any way. who knows and who cares. i have never been asked to cover up nor have i ever been asked to remove my nose ring. when i have outside guests come in, depending upon who they are, i may or may not take the nose jewelry out.

Generation of tattooed workers leaving a mark
Piercings, art, means rewriting dress codes, reconsidering culture, lawsuits


NEW YORK - Colleen Harris doesn’t fit the stereotype of the buttoned-up librarian.
Her arms are covered with a pirate queen motif and black scrolling designs, which extend down the side of her body to her ankle. A black rose and the words “Dangerous Magic” adorn the back of her left hand, and the words “Anam Cara” (old Gaelic for “soul friend”) letter her knuckles.
The 27-year-old — who has multiple masters degrees and a job at the University of Kentucky’s research library — feels no pressure to cover up.
“It’s not really possible at this point, unless I wore gloves,” Harris said, adding that she thinks academia has been more accepting of her body art than the corporate world would be. “I think my qualifications should speak for themselves.”
The face of the young American worker is changing, and it’s increasingly decorated with ink and metal. About half of people in their 20s have either a tattoo or a body piercing other than traditional earrings, according to a study published in June in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology. That figure, which is higher than the national average, is growing, said Anne Laumann, the study’s co-author and a dermatologist at Northwestern University.
As a result, employers are finding that dress codes may need updating. In some cases, bosses are loosening up to attract young talent. In others, managers are adding new rules to keep body art covered up.
“In the past, there were very general dress codes. Now, I see dress codes that are five pages long,” said David Barron, an attorney with Epstein Becker Green Wickliff & Hall PC. “Employers see a need to be very, very specific, and draw lines very clearly.”
At the medication flavoring company Flavorx — where the average employee is about 28 years old — chief financial officer Woodie Neiss recently told human resources to add a body art section to the dress code, after an employee showed up to work with an eyebrow piercing.......


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