The name Kat Von D is almost synonymous with tattoos.
But currently, the author, musician, and former TV star is in the process of blacking out most of the famous designs across her body.
This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers. Become an Insider and start reading now. Have an account? Log in.Von D began replacing her original tattoos in late 2020 and has since spent nearly 40 hours completing the task. In an Instagram post last week, she said she's about 80% finished so far.
As for why the tattoo artist has made such a drastic change, Von D said in her post that many of her old tattoos don't align with who she is today. She renounced the occult and macabre in 2022 and was baptized in her local church this year.
Here's a look at 13 tattoos Von D has covered with black ink, and six she's left untouched so far.
In an Instagram post on Thursday, the celebrity artist showed her latest blackout ink and explained why she's covered many of her original tattoos.
"17 sessions, and almost 40 accumulative hours later, we are about 80% done with blacking out my body," Von D wrote, adding that she's covered "many tattoos" that don't align with who she is today.
"Some people are fine with keeping these types of landmarks in time on them — I personally grew tired of waking up to them, and seeing those constant reminders every time I looked in a mirror," she said.
She also said she loves the aesthetic of blackout ink and finds it satisfying "to see a clean slate" on her body.
Von D has long been covered in tattoos, but her most famous are the small stars that sit on her temple.
In her 2009 book "High Voltage Tattoo," Von D described them as some of her favorites. She also said she originally had one star on each of her temples but added more over the years.
"When I was married, my husband told me to stop getting my face tattooed, and being the stubborn person I am, right then and there I went and added seven more stars!" she wrote about her first husband Oliver Peck.
So far, Von D has seemingly covered every tattoo on her left leg aside from one. In her book, Von D described it as her "yearbook leg," or a place for her non-tattoo artist friends to leave their mark.
Some of the standout tattoos she's concealed with black ink include:
It's unclear who the portrait on her left leg represents, though Von D has seemingly left the image untouched.
In a progress photo of her blackout tattoo posted on June 7, 2022, you can see the portrait surrounded by darker ink.
The massive tattoo spread across the left side of her rib cage, part of her stomach, and around her torso near her back. It shows an angel with black hair holding her hand in a devil's horn symbol.
In her book "High Voltage Tattoo," Von D said the black-and-gray tattoo was done with a single needle and "biker-inspired simple shading."
Von D hasn't said why she's chosen to cover this tattoo, though she said on Instagram in 2022 that she's renouncing the occult and macabre.
Von D wrote in her 2009 book that her "main goal" was to have rose buds across her throat, almost reaching out to "something similar" on the other side of her neck.
It's unclear if she plans to follow through with that idea, but Von D has seemingly left this set of roses alone.
Above that tattoo is a yellow lightning bolt surrounded by the letters TCB, which stands for "Takin' Care of Business."
For years, Von D had traditional-style roses across her upper arm, a portrait of her sister Karoline on her forearm, and a 1942 Varga girl on her left bicep.
All have seemingly been covered by Von D's blackout tattoo.
Von D sold her Los Angeles mansion after saying she felt California was overrun with "terrible policies, tyrannical government overreach, ridiculous taxing," and "so much more corruption."
Still, she has the name of the city where she spent much of her life tattooed on her left shoulder.
Similar to her left arm, Von D covered the gray roses and a portrait, which was of Cuban-Mexican actor Rosa Carmina, on her right side.
She also previously had a skull wearing a hat tattooed by Steve-O from "Jackass."
In "High Voltage Tattoo," Von D explained that her black-and-gray portrait of her father mirrors his high-school photo that was taken in Argentina sometime in the 1960s.
Her blackout ink now surrounds the portrait, something Von D talked about on Instagram when she first got blackout ink on her right arm.
"Now my arm looks so nice and clean, and the portrait of my Father stands out even more," she wrote.
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