tea towel calendars
Nautical Tattoo Tea Towel Calendars: for the meanings of the symbols, look here at the post written by Owen Burke, Brian Lam of The Scuttlefish.
2013 Ships of NYHarbor Tea Towel Calendar also available. Both designs have unhemmed, raw, pinked edges (zigzagged.)
Printed in North Carolina by Spoonflower. They started making decals, and I have many decals of some of my ship doodles printed on polyester and coated with a non-PVC plastic coating. Peel and stick up. The verdict: excellent quality! more on the decals to come!
Apologies to friends’ NYHarbor ships I have yet to draw! Lilac, J.J.Harvey (and all the beautiful old fireboats), DEP vessels, Swivel, Taurus…I’m getting to you, promise!
What is a tea towel? well, i’d be honored to see one of mine in an engine room. If you work on a vessel pictured, you get 25% off. Thank you!
nautical tattoos
Written and researched by Owen Burke, Brian Lam of The Scuttlefish:![]()
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Hold written on one set of knuckles and Fast written on the other was meant to give a sailor good grip in the rigging.
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A Rope tattooed around the wrist meant that a seaman is a deckhand.
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A tattoo of an Anchor told that a sailor had crossed the Atlantic, or was part of the Merchant Marines.
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Crossed Anchors on the webbing between the thumb and index fingers marked a bos’n's (or boatswain’s) mate.
A Nautical Star or Compass Rose was given so that a sailor could always find her way home.
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A Harpoon marked a member of the fishing fleet.
A Full-Rigged Ship displayed that a sailor has been around Cape Horn.
A Dragon signified that a sailor has served in China. A Golden Dragon was given when a sailor crossed the International Date Line.
A Shellback Turtle or King Neptune was earned when a sailor made it across the Equator.
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Guns or Crossed Cannons signified military naval service.





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