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I rebuilt my tattoo tool around visual references and artist briefs

I shared AIMakeTattoo here a few weeks ago as a small AI tattoo idea, lettering, and font preview tool.

Since then I’ve received feedback from a few places that made me rethink the positioning.

Some people focused on image quality and whether the designs looked too AI-generated. Some pointed out that the more useful part might be the handoff to a tattoo artist. Others questioned whether the product is really about generating images, or about helping users make a clearer decision before they talk to an artist.

I also spent more time looking at real tattoo communities. One thing became clearer: complex tattoo references are not automatically useless. A lot of real tattoos are highly detailed, especially larger pieces, Japanese work, realism, black and grey, illustrative tattoos, and game/anime-inspired designs.

So I don’t think the answer is to make every output extremely simple or “safe.”

The direction I’m testing now is:

rough tattoo idea
→ strong visual reference
→ artist discussion brief
→ artist adaptation

That feels more useful than just saying “AI tattoo generator.”

Recent changes:

  • improved the visual direction and homepage presentation
  • moved the product away from generic AI SaaS styling
  • improved the AI tattoo generator around tattoo-style visual references
  • added copyable Artist Briefs after generation
  • added a Roman Numeral Tattoo Generator for dates, birthdays, anniversaries, and memorial-style ideas
  • added a Tattoo Cost Calculator for rough planning ranges
  • added Explore pages for tattoo idea references
  • added Blog content around artist communication and AI concept vs final execution
  • improved SEO/structured data for the main tool pages

The positioning I’m leaning toward is:

AIMakeTattoo helps people turn rough tattoo ideas into visual references and artist discussion briefs.

If someone likes a generated design, they can bring it to a tattoo artist. The artist can then adapt it for placement, size, line work, readability, and final execution.

That feels more honest than pretending every output is ready to tattoo directly, but stronger than treating the image as just a throwaway AI mockup.

Site:
https://aimaketattoo.com

I’d appreciate blunt feedback on:

  • whether “visual reference + artist brief” is clear
  • whether the homepage still feels too much like a generic AI generator
  • whether focused tools like Roman numerals, lettering, and cost planning make the product stronger
  • whether this feels more useful as a consumer planning tool or eventually as a shop-facing intake workflow
on July 10, 2026
  1. 1

    I think the positioning became much clearer once the artist stayed in the story.

    You're no longer competing with tattoo artists or promising a finished design. You're helping people arrive at the consultation with better clarity. That shifts the product from "AI makes your tattoo" to "AI helps you communicate your idea," which feels like a much stronger position.

    1. 1

      That’s a really good way to put it.

      The image is still useful, but the stronger position is not “AI makes your tattoo.” It’s helping someone show up to the artist with a clearer idea, better references, and fewer vague instructions.

      I still need to test whether people actually use the brief in real artist conversations, but this feels much closer to the right direction.

      1. 1

        I'm glad it resonated.

        Your last sentence is the part that caught my attention.

        I have a thought about that test which I'd rather explain in the context of your product than as a generic opinion.

        If you're open to it, what's the best email to reach you on?

          1. 1

            Thanks! I’ve just sent it over.

            Looking forward to hearing your thoughts whenever you have a chance.

  2. 1

    “Visual reference + artist brief” is clearer, but the missing signal isn’t another opinion on the positioning; it’s whether someone actually uses the brief in an artist conversation. I’d test it with 10 people actively planning a tattoo: give each a reference + copyable brief, then track whether they send it to an artist or ask you to revise it. That result would also tell you whether the consumer-planning path deserves focus before exploring shop intake. Has anyone used one of the briefs with an artist yet?

    1. 1

      That’s fair.

      I don’t have enough evidence yet that people are actually using the brief in real artist conversations. Right now it’s still a product hypothesis based on the friction I kept seeing: rough idea, unclear style/placement/detail choices, and uncertainty about what to tell the artist.

      I think the next useful test is exactly that: give a few people a reference + copyable brief and see whether they send it to an artist, ask for revisions, or ignore the brief.

      I’m also considering asking a few tattoo artists to review the brief format directly, to see whether it would make a consultation easier or just add noise.

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