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A Nanoengineer Teamed Up With Rihanna鈥檚 Tattoo Artist to Make Smarter Ink

A Nanoengineer Teamed Up With Rihanna鈥檚 Tattoo Artist to Make Smarter Ink

Scientist Carson Bruns鈥 laboratory at the University of Colorado-Boulder makes tattoo inks by mixing, stirring, evaporating, and spinning a series of liquids until they end up with particles of dye encased in beads of plexiglass. (Rae Ellen Bichell/蘑菇影院 Health News)

BOULDER, Colo. 鈥 Mad-scientist kind of moments happen fairly often for nanoengineer Carson Bruns. A few months ago in his lab at the University of Colorado-Boulder, he tested his latest invention on his own arm and asked a colleague for help.

鈥淲e were like, 鈥極K, we’re going to tattoo ourselves. Can you help us today?鈥欌 he said.

The tattoo is like a freckle, a little blue dot. But he can turn it on and off. Like the way a mood ring changes color with temperature, this tattoo changes with light: Ultraviolet light to turn it on, daylight (or even a flashlight) to turn it off.

鈥淵ou can go to court and turn it off, and then go to the party and turn it on. And then go to Grandma’s house and turn it off,鈥 said Bruns, who is affiliated with the university鈥檚 , which prides itself on fostering out-of-the-box ideas.

Bruns started a company with tattoo-artist-to-the-stars Keith 鈥淏ang Bang鈥 McCurdy, along with a former doctoral student. Early next year, they plan to release their first product, to a group of handpicked artists. The business partners have long-term hopes for smart tattoos that have a health value, but cosmetics are cheaper and simpler to get to consumers than medical devices. So, that鈥檚 where they鈥檙e starting.

The new ink will enter a market in a moment of flux for the regulation of cosmetics. The FDA steps in to urge a recall if an ink causes a bacterial outbreak but traditionally has not exercised its regulatory might over tattoo ink products as it does with other products that go into the body. (Tattoo inks don鈥檛 even have to be sterile.) But following the , the FDA is expanding its authority over tattoo manufacturers. The agency is now accepting about tattoo ink preparation.

Three photos shown side-by-side: An arm with no tattoo; shining a UV light on their arm; their arm with a visible blue dot tattoo.
Carson Bruns demonstrates how to turn his tattoo on and off: UV light turns it on; a regular flashlight turns it off.(Rae Ellen Bichell/蘑菇影院 Health News)

鈥淭o be honest with you, I don’t think either the FDA or the tattoo ink industry really knows what that’s going to look like,鈥 said John Swierk, a chemist at the State University of New York-Binghamton. But, he said, the law does mean 鈥渢he FDA has a new charge to really ensure that labeling is correct and good manufacturing practices are being followed.鈥

Bruns said Magic Ink is made of particles of dye, encased in beads of plexiglass 鈥 the same polymethyl methacrylate material people use to plump their lips. Dermal fillers are FDA-approved, whereas tattoo ink contents can be like a black box.

Swierk said many of the tattoo pigments in use now have been around a long time, which gives some users a base comfort level about their safety. But a new material comes with new unknowns.

鈥淚f somebody is going to get tattooed with Magic Ink, they have to accept a degree of uncertainty about what the future is going to hold with that ink,鈥 Swierk said.

Bruns recently from the National Science Foundation, which he plans to use for probing which size and type of nanoparticles are less likely to irritate the immune system and more likely to stay put where they鈥檙e placed. The immune system has been known to haul off bits of tattoo ink to the lymph nodes, .

While Magic Ink is a cool party trick, Bruns and his colleagues have made other inks that align with their bigger goal: to make tattoos helpful.

Bruns and his colleagues have made one that changes color when 鈥 envisioning it might someday work as a built-in exposure meter. Another ink shows up when it is . He developed yet another ink intended to act as a permanent sunscreen. None of those are available to consumers, though the permanent sunscreen is furthest along. That ink has been tested in a small group of mice; the others have been tested on pigskin.

Bruns started a company, Hyprskn, a few years ago, when Bang Bang came across his work and suggested they team up.

The name Bang Bang might not ring a bell, but the tattoos he鈥檚 done are very public: They鈥檙e cascading down Rihanna, scattered across Miley Cyrus, and peering out from LeBron James, among others. Turns out, Bang Bang loves tech.

鈥淚 would like to wave my hand and pay with my AmEx, or walk up to my car and it knows it’s me,鈥 he said. Or, he continued, maybe there could even be health applications 鈥 like alerting him if his blood sugar is high or low, just by looking at the color of his tattoos.

Scientifically, that is still way far off. If tattoo ink were to make the leap from cosmetics into the medical realm, it would require clearing all sorts of regulatory hoops.

鈥淭here’s a lot of steps between where we are today and getting a functional tattoo that鈥檚 going to tell you something about your health,鈥 Swierk said. 鈥淎 lot of steps.鈥

But Bang Bang thinks the product they鈥檙e taking preorders for is step one toward building a consumer base that would be open to tattooable tech.

The first product they鈥檙e offering to consumers is Magic Ink. It鈥檚 a lot like that blue freckle on Bruns鈥 arm, except it鈥檚 red. For now, that鈥檚 the only color available for purchase.

鈥淭hat’s how you can excite people,鈥 said Bang Bang. 鈥淚t’s almost a Trojan horse into that new goal of how do we bridge the gap between tattoo and technology.鈥

Two photos side-by-side: on the left are vials of tattoo inks; on the right are a the same vials changing colors after a UV light is shone on them.
A series of tattoo inks change color with exposure to UV light.(Rae Ellen Bichell/蘑菇影院 Health News)

It鈥檚 $100 for a half-ounce bottle. That鈥檚 a lot more than regular ink costs. If the product takes off, the University of Colorado-Boulder will also benefit, as it owns the intellectual property.

Bang Bang is among a few dozen people, many of them tattoo artists, who are already wearing the ink in their skin.

Tattoo artist Selina Medina has been in the business more than 20 years and used to work for an ink manufacturer. She spends a lot of time advocating for tattoo safety, volunteering with several national and international groups focused on the issue.

鈥淚’d probably give it a year in the market before I would buy it. But it does look really interesting,鈥 said Medina, who is on the board of directors for the Alliance of Professional Tattooists.

Medina hopes this ink is different from the UV inks she saw pop up in the 2000s, which would glow under a black light.

鈥淚t seemed like an awesome idea, but then we noticed that it faded really fast,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t would just disappear. We didn’t know what it did. We didn’t know where it went. And that was just kind of like, 鈥榃hat the hell is this stuff?鈥欌

She expects her customers will be clamoring for Magic Ink before she鈥檚 ready to purchase it.

Looking further afield, some companies are already investing in technology embedded in the skin. A European company called DSruptive makes injectable thermometers. It said about 5,000 people 鈥 living primarily in Sweden, Japan, the U.S., and the United Kingdom 鈥 have had the devices installed. Ali Yetisen, an engineer at Imperial College London, said for companies eyeing tech embedded in the skin, diabetes is a big focus.

鈥淭hat’s where the money is. Most companies invest in this area,鈥 said Yetisen. The dream is to create something like a tattoo that could measure blood sugar in real time, and be long-lasting, he said.

鈥淭hat’s the holy grail of all medical diagnostics,鈥 he said.

While Bruns鈥 inventions sense external factors like light and radiation, for manufacturers looking to develop in-body tech that reacts to the blood, there are other scientific hurdles. The immune system forms little shells around foreign bodies, effectively putting up a wall between a sensor and the blood.

No one has really figured a way around that yet, said Yetisen, but a lot of people are trying.

A photo of a man holding up the side of his hand to show a red heart tattoo.
Celebrity tattoo artist Keith 鈥淏ang Bang鈥 McCurdy shows a small red heart tattoo created with Magic Ink.(Jorge Torres)