Mitch Koch | Blackwork, Dotwork, and the Anatomy of Architectural Placement
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A great geometric tattoo doesn’t just look clean in a photo, it has to move with the person wearing it. We’re spotlighting Mitch Koch from Sleepy Reaper Tattoo in Madison, Wisconsin, and the reason his large scale blackwork and dotwork feels so intentional: he designs with body composition in mind. Think of it less like drawing a pattern and more like mapping a structure across real anatomy, from the neck and throat to the back and spine.
We dig into a neck piece that threads the needle between mixed existing styles like lettering, realism, and color, then lands everything into crisp geometric linework that still feels seamless. The details matter here: how the design cuts around the "adam’s-apple" area, how the mandala-like forms sit on the throat, and how following the jawline can make the whole tattoo look deeper and cleaner from every angle. If you’re planning a neck tattoo, this is a practical look at what “flow” actually means.
Then we shift to a favorite back piece and talk about contrast, saturation, and why bold black can still show nuance. From big fields of black to intricate ornamental sections, the design reads like a single system rather than separate ideas, and it reinforces the value of patience, planning, and genuine care for how the client feels during the process.
If you’re into blackwork tattoos, geometric tattoos, ornamental design, or simply want to understand what makes placement elite, hit play. Subscribe for more, share this with a tattoo friend, and leave a review telling us what body placement you want us to break down next.