R!: – What was your inspiration for some of the early album covers? For example, the Burzum albums. ![]() And even our clients with wheelchairs, we have to hold them up with ropes through three floors really, to get them up there. The house is from 1705 and it feels like you’re walking into a pirate ship every morning because the ropes are hanging from the ceiling and nothing is completely angled. It’s probably the most famous row of houses in Norway, so it’s really special to sit there, specially doing what I do with the norse woodcarvings and runes. So now it’s at Bryggen in Bergen, that’s a UNESCO heritage site. So me and a colleague from there, Annlaug, opened our own within half a year after the festival we had. That made me start thinking that maybe it was time to open up my own studio. But then I kinda woke up because I have two kids and everything and after working there for almost 20 years, some of the visiting tattooers were asking me why I was still there. There were a lot of different things and only Norwegian bands from 1994 or before. JWH: Yes, we just wanted to do full-on that year. JWH: I worked at a shop called Let’s Buzz for over 20 years, and then I organized a metal festival in 2015 called BlekkMetal in Bergen. R!: – What’s the story behind your current tattoo studio? When did you start with it? And with the logo thing for about 30 I guess. He would pay me with tattoos and then I became his apprentice, so I’ve been tattooing for 27 years now. And because of the Immortal logo, the only tattooer in town asked me if I could do drawings for his newly opened shop. I’ve always been doing it and I started drawing logos and covers when I was about eighteen. Jannicke Wiese-Hansen: I started drawing before I could walk. RISE!: – When did you start drawing and when did you become a tattoo artist? We discussed the beginning of her career, the inspiration behind some of her most iconic artworks, the early Black Metal scene and more! She’s a tattoo artist who has her studio called Nidhogg in Bergen and was invited to the festival as part of the art exhibition. This is a common version of this tattoo because it represents the main mythology concerning the Nidhogg tattoo, which is that the Nidhogg is slowly strangling the Yggdrasil.During the last edition of Inferno Festival in Oslo, Norway, we were able to talk to Jannicke Wiese-Hansen, the artist who created logos for bands such as Immortal and Enslaved, as well as the album covers for the now legendary first two Burzum albums. ![]() It is common to have a Nidhogg tattoo of a Nidhogg dragon-serpent snaked around the trunk of a Yggdrasil. Let’s take a look at some Nidhogg tattoo designs: Nidhogg tattoos are interesting because this long dragon-serpent has a cool look.Ī lot of times, the Yggdrasil tattoo is incorporated into the design, and sometimes other Viking symbols are added to the tattoo. Now that we know what Nidhogg tattoos mean in general, let’s take a look at some Nidhogg tattoos designs and their specific meanings: Nidhogg Tattoo Designs and Their Meanings ![]() Many people want to remember their mistakes so that they can learn from them and therefore a tattoo representing this event can help to remind you not to make that mistake again. You may ask, why would someone want to remember a regrettable decision?
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