Model Who Can’t Get A Job With 99% Of Her Body Inked Shows Off What She Looked Like Before Transformation
‘Australia‘s most tattooed woman’ has revealed what she looked like before her extreme transformation.
Amber Luke, who is widely referred to as the ‘Dragon Girl’, has reportedly spent $300,000 on ‘tattoos, plastic surgeries, piercings, and injections’.
And now, she’s provided IGV with photos to show just how much she’s changed.
Although Luke has reportedly covered 99 per cent of her body in inkings, she says she has no plans to stop.
The model tells IGV: “There will never be a point where I am done self-evolving – both inside and outside. Call it whatever you will – but I see change and self-growth to be beautiful and bold.”
Luke has pursued an extreme look for many years, revealing that she decided she wanted to undergo one of her biggest modifications when she was 20 years old.
“I knew I wanted my eyeballs tattooed from 20 years old, I saw it online and thought it was so strikingly unique. I knew it was meant for me,” she says.
Eyeball tattooing is permanent colouring of the white of the eye. It’s performed by injecting ink with a needle underneath the top layer of the eye, in several locations, as per NSW Health. It’s permanent and non-reversible.
Luke found that having her eyeballs tattooed wasn’t a smooth sailing experience – it led to her being blind for three weeks.
She explains to IGV: “It is not meant to happen like that. You are supposed to see straight after and feel no pain or discomfort. The eyeball has no nerves at the front of the eye – unfortunately for me – he hit my retina.”
Although there are success stories when it comes to eyeball tattooing, it’s highly dangerous and underregulated.
Due to it being a relatively rare procedure, the long-term consequences of the procedure are unknown, as per WebMD.
And this isn’t the only tattoo mishap Luke has experienced.
The model recalls: “I have had a mad infected wrist tattoo. It took two rounds of strong antibiotics and painkillers to heal the infection. Turns out you shouldn’t go swimming with fresh tattoos… little did I know they when I was 16.”