Breaking Tradition

Rebecca Loveless isn’t sure how many tattoos she has, but she guesses about 60. She calls the areas of her skin without them “spots.”

“I’m filling the spots,” she says. “It’s not so much as, ‘I want a tattoo on my chest.’ It’s, ‘I need a tattoo on my chest because there’s a giant spot there.’ ”

She gets tattooed regularly at Tradition Tattoo, her Delray Beach parlor—the first in the city—that turns 1 this month. Before it moved into its new home (165 Avenue L), it was based in Boca Raton—making the business 5 years old.

Rebecca 2“Hey, Sam … do you think we’ll still get ‘5’ tattoos?” Loveless asks one of her artists as he walks by on a recent afternoon.

“Yeah,” he says with a shrug, not missing a beat.

Getting new ink is a casual affair at Tradition, but opening the shop was anything but. When she heard there were no tattoo shops in Delray Beach, where she’s been living for six years, it became her mission to add one.

“I thought, well, I can be first,” says Loveless, who specializes in custom, American-traditional designs. “I’ve always enjoyed the idea of making history and putting my stamp on something.”

She applied two years ago but was rejected. The University of Florida visual arts alumna prodded—where was proof that she couldn’t open a tattoo shop?

“I’m the type of person who loves a ‘no,’ ” the 34-year-old says, laughing. “Like, tell me ‘no.’ Go ahead. I love the challenge of it.”

Rebecca 1Nowhere in the city regulations did it say she couldn’t—but it didn’t say she could, either. She took advantage of that limbo and, per the city’s suggestion, hired a lawyer. With his help, she argued that permanent makeup, a cosmetic technique that uses tattoos, had been going on in Delray Beach for years.

It worked. Last June, Tradition changed its ZIP code. Business grew about 30 percent, Loveless says, and she hired another artist to join the small, close-knit staff. After the battle with the city, it began acknowledging her as an artist, even enlisting her to paint the Delray Affairs and Garlic Fest posters.

“When I’m an old lady, I can still be the first tattoo artist in this town,” she says. “Makes you proud.”

*** Lifestyle Bonus ***

Rebecca Loveless laughs looking back: She never thought she’d be in the tattoo business. “I’m from Boca,” she insists, flipping her hair.

She graduated from UF in 2004 as visual arts major—with just one small tattoo she got when she was 18—and landed what she thought was her dream job at a New York City gallery. “I absolutely hated it,” she says.

One day she got a tattoo—a little blue square with pink flowers on her wrist—from a famous tattoo artist who specializes in miniatures. He was spiritual, and from the way Loveless prepared for the tattoo and carried herself, he saw something in her.

Then began years of apprenticing at a shop in Queens, working as a shop hand in the Lower East Side and waitressing to compensate for the salary lost from quitting the gallery. She became a collector of tattoos, walking art that showed off her colleagues’ skills.

“It’s just part of the industry—you want to support the people you’re with,” she says. “Very rarely do [my tattoos] have meaning. I know that sounds odd, but truly I get stuff that just makes me happy.”

Her mom, whom Loveless says she’s close with, didn’t come around as quickly to her new image. That became clear six years ago, when she moved to Delray Beach to escape the chaos of the city.

“I remember when I moved down here, we were at Starbucks just drinking coffee,” Loveless says. “To me it wasn’t anything, but I remember her being a little horrified at sitting with someone who was heavily tattooed.”

“‘Don’t you think people are staring at you?’” she recalls her mother whispering.

Loveless says she shrugged it off. “Yeah, probably—I’m heavily tattooed. It feels weird now, but the more time we spend together, the less you’ll think about it.”

She was right. Now, her mom is a regular at Tradition—just not as a customer. “She says, ‘You have enough [tattoos] for everyone,’” Loveless quips.

Her husband doesn’t didn’t think so. When they met, he had a single tattoo. Now, he’s a collector, as well. “He’s a businessman, so he’ll never go full throttle with it,” she says. “He got a lot of tattoos when we were dating. If he wanted to see me, he basically had to come hang out in the shop.”

 

You May Also Like
The New Longevity Salon

An invitation-only evening at Gary Brecka’s Miami home gathered the thinkers quietly shaping how longevity is lived, not just studied.

Read More
A large group of people dressed in formal attire sit around an elegant dining table with candles and place settings, listening attentively and taking photos at a modern, well-lit indoor event hosted by a Longevity Salon. Lifestyle
After Hours, Done Right

Lifestyle marked its January issue with a lively, late-night celebration at W Fort Lauderdale.

Read More
A group of people, dressed in stylish evening attire, pose and smile together at an After Hours social event with warm lighting and other guests in the background. Lifestyle
Orange Ribbons for Jaime

A nonprofit foundation created by her parents, keeps Jaime’s spirit alive through giving back.

Read More
A female dancer in a flowing blue costume leaps gracefully in mid-air against a dark background, with arms and legs extended and her face turned upward, capturing the vibrant spirit of Fort Lauderdale's talented Inner Circle performers. Lifestyle
Fort Lauderdale’s New Inner Circle

Inside Naftali Group and The h.wood Group’s plan to bring a discreet, design-forward private club and restaurant to Viceroy Fort Lauderdale.

Read More
Aerial view of a rectangular swimming pool with "VICEROY" on its floor, surrounded by lounge chairs, umbrellas, and palm trees. Two poolside beds and small palm islands float in the water, creating a tranquil oasis like a river of relaxation—perfect for enjoying Pineapple Jam. Lifestyle
Other Posts
Pineapple Jam Returns to the River

The Historic Stranahan House Museum’s signature tropical fundraiser lights up Fort Lauderdale on April 10.

Read More
A historic two-story house with a wooden porch and American flag sits by the river, surrounded by trees. A sign in front reads “Historic Stranahan House Museum,” with modern buildings visible in the background. Lifestyle
Leaders in Health Care

Q&A with Dr. Gordon L. Chen, Co-Founder and CEO of BLU by Thrivewell

Read More
A woman and a man, leaders in Health Care, stand smiling in front of a modern white reception desk with a "BLU by ThriveWell" sign. The room is well-lit, featuring round ceiling lights and contemporary interior design. Lifestyle
Leaders in Health Care

Dr. Maria Alejandra de la Pena on Redefining Longevity Through Spine and Joint Regeneration

Read More
A woman with long brown hair wearing a blue lace dress sits with her hand resting on her face, looking at the camera against a plain light background. She is also wearing a silver watch—her confident pose exudes the poise of health care leaders. Lifestyle
Leaders in Health Care

Q&A with Raina Simone Hachet, PA-C at Raina Simone Aesthetics

Read More
A woman in black scrubs, a leader in health care, stands beside a medical aesthetic device with a touch screen in a bright, elegant clinic featuring white furniture and a chandelier. Lifestyle