You should not use Indian ink or sepia ink or any other form of drawing ink for a tattoo. Tattoo pigments are made to be used for just that, tattooing. Any reputable tattooist will use QUALITY ink for a tattoo. If you're tattooing at home, take apart your machines, put them in a plastic Ziploc bag and go get an apprenticeship and stop spreading disease.
No its not its not bad for tattooing
Sepia ink is derived from cuttlefish ink.
Sepia.
Sepia.
Brownish-grey
Originally from the ink of the cuttlefish.
Genuine Sepia.
sepia
If you mean the henna ones, no. If you mean the ones that are applied with a sharp pointed object and ink, yes.
Cuttlefish produce a brownish-colored ink called sepia. Cuttlefish ink was in fact where sepia first came from. The Latin name of the common cuttlefish, Sepia officinalis, reflects this fact.
Tattoos are made of ink pigments embedded in the skin.
NO. Tattoos hurt because of the needle guns that puncture the skin to leave ink behind. Black light tattoos do not hurt anymore or less than regular tattoos. Their ink is what glows in black light, and it is very similar to regular ink.