Did he not cancel 24 hours before the appointment? Did he not state that he was taking the idea to a different artistâone who specializes in horrorâbecause you couldnât execute the design?
More importantly, did you not tell him that he would need to send another deposit for the new piece, confirming that the first tattoo design was scrapped and voided? You made it clear that this would be an entirely new order, yet you still carried the cancellation policy from the first design over to the second.
If the cancellation applied to both, then why charge another deposit for the next tattoo? That would mean you took the original $100 deposit, charged $300 to cancel it, and then required another $100 for the second design. So which is it?
If a design change still counts as the original booking, then why ask for a new deposit? And if itâs considered a new booking, then why apply the cancellation fee from the previous one?
This isnât about policiesâitâs about transparency. And calling out greedy business practices isnât bashing, itâs just the truth.
"Without the new deposit for the new design, the cancellation policy doesnât apply to the second design. The new deposit = new agreement and the first one wouldâve been void, but he didnât send a new deposit so the first appointment was what he paid on." - the response from the shop. Your reasoning doesnât hold up.
Youâre claiming that without the new deposit, the cancellation policy doesnât apply to the second designâbut thatâs not how deposits work. A new deposit = a new agreement, meaning the first one would have been void entirely. Yet you still applied the cancellation fee to the first design, despite him canceling within the correct timeframe (as proven by screenshots).
So what actually happened?
He canceled on time (before 3 PM, at 9 AM). He informed you that he was going to a different artist for the horror piece. Instead of honoring the cancellation policy for the first tattoo, you forced him to âbuy his way outâ by requiring a new depositâeven though he had already walked away from the project. Now, youâre upset that he didnât show up for a tattoo he never agreed to pay a deposit for in the first place. This is why people are confused by your stance. A deposit exists to secure an appointment, not to trap someone into paying their way out of a service they no longer want. If the cancellation was honored properly, he wouldnât have needed to put down money on a new design just to escape the old one.
At the end of the day, mistakes happen, but if you keep finding yourself in these disputes, maybe itâs time to reconsider how you handle business. Because right now, the common denominator isnât the clientsâitâs you.
On your own policies, its $50 dollars fee to cancel within 48 hours. 9 am on a saturday, when the appointment was 10:30 monday is what. 48 hours. You. Are. Wrong. In every single regard here. You stole 250 from someone, ignored your own policies and think the world is out to get you. No, you...
   Read moreLetâs set the record straight. A client booked a tattoo with you in 2024, put down a deposit, and expected a professional service. Instead, you took seven hours to produce AI-looking outlines with no shading or color, then charged $400 for two sketches because you couldnât execute the requested design. Thatâs not industry standard; thatâs a hustle.
Yes, I shared your work for feedback in a private Discord serverâbecause thatâs what people do when they want opinions on an artistâs skills. The original buyer isnât even in the server, so the idea that this is some mass vendetta is nonsense. This is a review of your work and business ethics.
Youâre right about one thing: no one is saying you canât run your business this way. But no one has to respect it, either. If you overcharge for subpar art, people will call you out, and if you canât handle public critique, thatâs on youânot your...
   Read moreTaylor created the most beautiful memorial piece for my husband. I sent her a paragraph of things I wanted, and she didn't run the other way. She contacted me, we discussed the list, then she brought me back to reality and we made a consultation appointment. At the appointment she asked questions, listened to what was important to me and the reasons why. At the end of the appointment she had a rough drawing to go by and from that created the most beautiful piece that represents Ken perfectly. I can wear it with pride, when asked I can tell the stories behind each thing we chose for the piece, but most importantly I can look at it and smile!! She's a true artist and her work is amazing. I'm so glad I...
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