
Recently, a certain type of bride has been appearing at laser clinics, and it’s not the kind you’d anticipate from the outdated stereotype of regretful tramp-stamp removal. Between consultations, she is frequently in her late twenties and uses her phone to compare dress necklines with the precise location of a tattoo on her collarbone while scrolling through TikTok. Whether or not she regrets the ink is not the question. Whether the ink matches the image of her walking down the aisle is the question.
It’s difficult to ignore how precise the timing has become. Clinics report a consistent influx between nine months and a year before a wedding date, which coincides almost perfectly with the amount of time it actually takes to fade, not erase, a tattoo so that concealer can finish the job. Carmen VanderHeiden Brodie, who assists in managing clinical operations at Removery, has discussed this trend directly, pointing out that brides typically arrive in need of a quick turnaround because, contrary to popular belief, weddings are planned in less than a year.
Interestingly, very few people are pursuing complete removal. Depending on the color and density of the ink, it could take up to two years, which is longer than most engagements. Rather, there is a more subdued and useful version of the trend: three or four sessions are sufficient to dull a tattoo from bold to ghostly, just faint enough that a long-sleeve concealer stick or a small amount of color-correcting makeup can complete the look on the day. It’s more about controlling the past for six hours in wedding photography lighting than it is about erasing it.
Observing how much importance people place on photos that, in some situations, will outlive the marriage itself is almost heartwarming. On a random Tuesday, most brides don’t care about a tattoo from an ex-boyfriend, a name inked at the age of 19, or a symbol connected to a friend group that has since dispersed. However, in the context of an album that future generations might listen to, they become intolerable. The wedding photo seems to function as a sort of permanent record in and of itself, directly challenging the tattoo’s purported permanence.
This fits into a broader cultural context than weddings. In general, getting rid of tattoos is no longer uncommon or awkward. Those who had their tattoos laser-removed used to be defined by reformed bad-boy energy; today, it’s mortgage holders, new parents, and people discreetly removing tattoos that don’t reflect who they are. Simply put, brides are an intensified form of that same impulse, crammed into a demanding, emotionally charged deadline.
No pun intended, it’s still unclear if this is a fleeting microtrend in the wedding industry or something more long-lasting. Pinterest boards change every year, and engagement seasons come and go. For now, however, there’s a familiar pattern in clinics from Arizona to London: brides enter with old tattoo photos on one phone screen and dress photos on another, hoping that the two will finally agree before the date.
