By Shonna Roberts, Paramedical Tattoo Artist & Educator
Scar and Stretch Mark Camouflage
Scar and stretch mark camouflage is often described as a technical skill.
Pigment selection. Needle choice. Depth control. Color correction.
Those things matter. But they are not what determines whether this work is truly successful.
In my experience, the most important factor in paramedical tattooing is the temperament of the practitioner.
Because this work isn’t just about skin. It’s about people who have lived in their bodies through trauma, transition, surgery, illness, or loss. And no amount of technical skill can compensate for a lack of emotional awareness.
This Is Trust-Based Work
Scar and stretch mark camouflage requires trust before anything else can happen.
Clients are often exposing parts of their body they’ve hidden for years. Sometimes decades. These areas may carry grief, shame, dysphoria, or memories they don’t talk about openly.
For transgender clients, this may involve bodies that have been scrutinized, politicized, or misunderstood. For trauma survivors, the skin itself can hold emotional weight.
That means the artist must be able to:
- Hold space without prying
- Communicate without assumptions
- Respect identity without explanation
- Stay regulated when emotions surface
If you’re uncomfortable with silence, vulnerability, or complexity, this work will challenge you.
See my in-person master scar camouflage training overview!
Why Temperament Is Non-Negotiable
Scar camouflage is slow. Stretch mark camouflage is layered and gradual. Results unfold over time, not instantly.
Artists who thrive in this space tend to share a few traits:
- Patience
- Emotional steadiness
- Honesty about limitations
- Comfort with ambiguity
- Willingness to say no when needed
This is not work for someone chasing dramatic before-and-afters or instant validation. It’s work for someone who understands that progress may be subtle, and success is often measured by how a client feels rather than what a photo shows.


Working With Trauma-Impacted Skin
Trauma shows up in the skin in many ways.
Scar tissue behaves differently. Stretch marks respond unpredictably. Nervous systems may be hyper-alert or shut down.
As artists, we need to be aware of how touch, positioning, and language can impact a client’s sense of safety. Even well-intentioned comments can be triggering if we’re not mindful.
That’s why education in this field must include:
- Trauma-informed communication
- Consent that is ongoing, not one-time
- Awareness of body autonomy
- Understanding when to pause or reschedule
If you’re not prepared to adapt in the moment, this work can cause harm.
See my Tips & Tricks for what scars NOT to work on!
Serving Transgender and Gender-Diverse Clients With Respect
Scar and stretch mark camouflage is deeply meaningful for many transgender and gender-diverse clients.
Top surgery scars. Hip or thigh stretch marks. Abdominal scarring. These are not just physical markers. They’re tied to identity, affirmation, and self-recognition.
Artists working in this space must be comfortable:
- Using correct names and pronouns
- Allowing clients to define their own goals
- Avoiding assumptions about bodies or experiences
- Creating a space that feels affirming, not clinical
You don’t need to understand every lived experience. You do need to respect them.
The Technique Still Requires Mastery
Compassion alone isn’t enough.
Scar and stretch mark camouflage requires advanced technical understanding, including:
- Color theory for hypopigmented skin
- Pattern mapping to avoid unnatural results
- Layering techniques that respect fragile tissue
- Realistic expectation setting
- Long-term planning across multiple sessions
This is not a one-and-done service. It’s a process. And clients deserve honesty about what’s possible.


Why I Teach This Work the Way I Do
When I train artists, I’m not just evaluating their technical ability. I’m paying attention to how they listen, how they respond, and how they handle discomfort.
Because this work will put you in rooms where emotions show up unannounced. Where silence is heavy. Where progress feels slow.
If you can stay grounded there, you can do this work well.
If you can’t, it’s okay to choose a different specialty.
Ethical Practice Means Knowing Yourself
Not every artist should offer scar and stretch mark camouflage.
That’s not gatekeeping. That’s ethical practice.
Knowing your own triggers, limitations, and capacity is part of professionalism. Referring a client out when you’re not the right fit is an act of care, not failure.
The best outcomes happen when the artist and client feel mutually safe.
Healing Is Not Always Visible
Some clients will cry when they see their results. Some will quietly nod. Some won’t say much at all.
Healing doesn’t look the same for everyone.
Our role is not to fix or erase the past. It’s to support a client in feeling more at home in their body now.
Scar and stretch mark camouflage can be powerful work. But only when it’s approached with humility, patience, and respect.
The technique matters.
The pigment matters.
But the artist matters most.
다엘라 아카데미 소개
다엘라 아카데미 세계적으로 인정받는 선도 기업입니다. 반영구 화장 저희는 예술성과 윤리성 모두에서 높은 기준을 제시하는 반영구 화장 교육 기관으로 잘 알려져 있습니다. 미국 전역과 해외에서 학생들이 저희 팀과 함께 훈련하기 위해 찾아오며, 저희는 꾸준히 발전하는 결과, 첨단 기술, 그리고 자연스러운 아름다움에 대한 깊은 헌신을 바탕으로 명성을 쌓아왔습니다.
저희 강사진은 단순한 아티스트를 넘어, 시술 결과의 완성도, 피부 건강, 그리고 장기적인 고객 만족을 최우선으로 생각하는 업계 전문가들입니다. 모든 교육 과정은 유행을 쫓지 않고, 아티스트들이 실질적인 경력 성장을 뒷받침할 수 있는 탄탄하고 실용적인 기반을 제공하도록 설계되었습니다.
다음과 같은 지역에 지점이 있습니다. 포틀랜드 그리고 스코츠데일, 25,000명 이상의 고객에게 서비스를 제공하고 3,000개 이상의 별 5개 리뷰를 받은 저희는 성장하는 글로벌 아티스트 커뮤니티를 최고의 전문가들이 이끌어갈 것입니다. 다엘라 아카데미 저희는 사려 깊은 교육, 높은 기준, 그리고 결과 중심적인 접근 방식을 통해 반영구 화장의 미래를 계속해서 만들어 나갈 것입니다.





