Over 40 percent of millennials have tattoos, according to the Pew Research Center, and we’re telling the stories of the UNC students and Chapel Hill/Carrboro residents who fall into that 40 percent. This is one of multiple stories in the Swerve Tattoo Impression series. Read the rest here.
In the Swerve series, From the archives, we're reviving already-published articles and giving them new life for a new audience. In September 2015, former staff writer Sarah McQuillan profiled Megan Thayer, owner of Ascension Tattoos.
“The very first thing I tattooed on was bananas,” said Meghan Thayer, owner and artist of Chapel Hill’s Ascension Tattoo.
“After you’ve tattooed a banana, you can peel it back and look at the inside of how deep your lines are and see if they’re too deep, if they’re not deep enough. You can see it from the inside, which is a really cool learning tool. And of course you haven’t really hurt anything, and you can peel the banana and eat it.”
After practicing with bananas and apprenticing for a year, Thayer opened Ascension Tattoo in Chapel Hill in September 2012. However, opening her own tattoo studio proved to be a surprising twist and challenging journey for Thayer, who had never imagined herself as a tattoo artist.
“I’ve always loved tattoos and I’ve always been drawn to it. I got my first tattoo when I was 18 in a minute — I just loved that aspect,” Thayer said. “But my upbringing was always kind of school and more conventional type stuff. So I went to college, got a corporate job and did all of that, and was really quite successful at it, but was super, super unhappy.”
Thayer said she began getting tattooed again in her early thirties while working in real estate.
“I wanted to start getting some bigger work and became friends with the tattoo artist at that point and helped him with some other kind of business type stuff that had been my background,” she explained. “And from there I just got really involved and ended up learning to tattoo.