Getting a tattoo is usually a highly calculated decision. It's on you for life — so there can't afford to be any mistakes.
But every once in a while, human-error peers its ugly head...
Getting a tattoo is usually a highly calculated decision. It's on you for life — so there can't afford to be any mistakes.
But every once in a while, human-error peers its ugly head...
They're all relatively small, tasteful, and easily hidden.
Luckily for her, only one of them is flawed.
Considering that she is a musician, it's no surprise that she has a tattoo commemorating her passion.
“I wanted something that says I love music," she told Independent.
This one actually has a deep story behind it.
“Mum and Dad and I all got the same tattoo. Circle of love/trust Making memories and ticking things off their bucket list," she wrote on Instagram.
These were done by the same artist that tattooed her matching wrist tattoo with her parents.
She hasn't publicly spoken out about the meaning behind this tattoo, but it is inspirational nonetheless.
Yesterday Jessie posted a photo of herself in a bikini — showing off her colossally misspelled tattoo.
Jessie J has a song called "Who You Are". It's a beautiful ballad about self-love and staying true to, you guessed it, who you are.
She got a few lyrics from this song — her own song, tattooed on her.
The lyric is supposed to be spelled: "Don't lose who you are in the blur of the stars".
But her tattoo reads: "Don't loose who you are in the blur of the stars".
Yikes!
"Yes my tattoo says... 'don’t loose who you are in the blur of the stars' Yes they are MY lyrics from my song who you are," she wrote.
"Yes I got it done in Essex Yes the tattoo artist didn’t mention it".
"Yes I still don’t know the difference between lose and loose. Yes It’s the reason I wear everything high waisted".
"And YES I know I have small boobs. Don’t waste your time telling me like I don’t see them everyday," she said.
I don't know about you, but I think I love her even more now for shutting up the haters before they even had a chance to speak.
18-year-olds make mistakes — it's just what they do. Unfortunately, for Jessie, it's one that she'll have to live with forever unless she wants to undergo the painful and hardly effective process of tattoo removal.
Let us know what you think of Jessie's misspelled tattoo.
Should she get it removed? Cover it up? Or just own it?