Excessive oil production from the skin will effectively change the white ink into brownish yellow. What's the point of having elegantly rendered white tiger tattoos on your body when they'll end up becoming ugly brownish yellow after a certain period of time? How long it takes for the color to change? Well that depends on the level of oil in your skin.
Designs selection is also important. I see too many people pluck them off the internet - mostly from cookie-cutter tattoo galleries. This is all well and good if you're not bothered about being unique. I on the other hand, wouldn't settle for any less than maximum uniqueness because the tattoos that I intend to have, will stick to my skin for the rest of my life. If you feel the same way, then here's a tip, find multiple white tiger tattoos from tattoo art databases, print out each design that you like separately and bring them to a good artist.
I prefer to browse through tattoo art databases because they don't carry rehash generic designs. Another matter worth noting is that you shouldn't put a lot of wordings on the image unless you intend to have large white tiger tattoos on either your back or chest. Adding too many wordings on a small sized tattoo would crammed up the overall design and after a few years, you can count on them looking like a blurry blob of ink!
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