Xăm mông thì sao?
lưu trữ hình xăm của người thân quá cố thành tác phẩm nghệ thuật...
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After a fatal (tai hại, chí tử) boating accident in 2019, Jonathan Gil was told he wouldn't be able to see the body of his twin brother before he was cremated (hoả thiêu, đốt ra tro) unless he could identify him by his tattoos. Morticians (nhân viên nhà tang lễ) told him that the body was too waterlogged (trương nước, trương phình do ngâm nước), and in no condition to be displayed for a wake.
a commercial business that gives family members an alternative way to memorialize (tưởng nhớ) deceased relatives (người thân đã mất): by harvesting tattooed skin from their dead bodies and preserving (bảo quản, lưu giữ) it forever.
Gil’s brother had several tattoos, and Boyland was able to piece back together two of them and send them to a lab in Ohio. There they would be preserved by Save My Ink Forever, a postmortem (khám nghiệm tử thi) tattoo service that turns recovered body ink into fine art collectibles (đồ sưu tầm). After the work was done, the funeral director delivered the framed tattoos to Gil and his mother in person.
“Everything kind of came rushing back, but in a weird way it was comforting,”
source: vice,
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