Style Guide4 min read
The Slow Art of Tebori
Tracing the hand-carving method behind Japan's traditional tattoo canon: what the word means, where it came from, and why a handful of masters still keep it alive.
May 31, 2026
Tebori 手彫り
When someone in the Japanese tattoo world refers to Tebori (手彫り), they mean tattooing done entirely by hand: no electric machine, just a hand-held tool worked rhythmically into the skin. It is the oldest method of traditional Japanese tattooing, and for most of the art's history it was simply how every tattoo was made.
The word breaks into two parts: te(手), meaning "hand," and -bori, from the verb horu(彫る), "to carve" or "to engrave." Literally, then, Tebori means something close to "hand carving." That carving language is the same -bori you'll have seen in wabori & yobori, and it points back to tattooing's deep historical kinship with woodblock carving.
It's worth noting how neatly the term sits in the lexicon. Where 和彫り (wabori) & 洋彫り (yōbori) divide tattoos by origin (Japanese versus Western), Tebori and its modern counterpart, 機械彫り (kikaibori, "machine carving"), divide them by method(by hand versus by machine). So Tebori is not a style; it is a technique. The dragons, koi & deities most people picture are wabori, the Japanese style, and Tebori is the traditional hand method historically used to bring that style to life.
History
Tebori took shape during the Edo period (1603–1868), when professional tattooists first emerged in the capital of Edo, modern-day Tokyo. From the start it was bound to ukiyo-e, the era's celebrated woodblock print art.
The link runs right down to the name. The craftsmen who carved woodblocks and the craftsmen who tattooed skin were both called horishi(彫師), or "carvers." The skill sets overlapped so closely that many woodblock carvers tattooed as well, both crafts calling for the same precise, patient hand. When the artist Utagawa Kuniyoshi published his dramatic series depicting the tattooed heroes of the Suikodenin the 1820s, it helped spark a tattoo craze among the commoners of Edo: firemen, laborers & merchants who wore large hand-carved designs as a mark of nerve and identity.
The character 彫り, once again from 彫る("to carve, to engrave"), keeps that artisanal heritage in plain view. Long before tattooing was something done to skin with a buzzing needle, it was something carvedinto it by hand, and the vocabulary still carries the memory of the woodblock & the chisel.
Tebori vs the Machine
The clearest way to understand Tebori is to set it beside the electric machine, kikaibori, the method behind most modern work, including the imported styles grouped under yobori.
The Tebori artist works with a tool called a nomi: a slender rod of bamboo or metal with a cluster of needles, hari, bound to the tip. There is no motor & no vibration. Holding the rod in one hand and stretching the skin taut with the other, the artist drives the needles in with a steady push of the forearm, entering the skin at an angle rather than the straight vertical puncture of a machine. The result is a quiet, rhythmic process that many describe as closer to meditation than to mechanics.
That hand control is prized above all for bokashi (ぼかし), the soft, graded shading that gives Japanese tattoos their depth & atmosphere. The word is borrowed straight from woodblock printing, where it means "gradation," and on skin it produces the smoky fades (mist around a dragon, shadow beneath a wave) that loyalists insist a machine still struggles to match. There is a common assumption, too, that hand-tattooing must hurt more; in practice most people report the opposite, finding Tebori less harsh on the skin, with less trauma & quicker healing. What it does demand is time. Tebori is slower than a machine and best suited to large work: back pieces, sleeves & full bodysuits built to flow with the body.
Tebori Today
Walk into a traditional Japanese studio now and you'll most often find a hybrid: crisp outlines laid down by machine, then shading & color worked in by hand, where Tebori's bokashi truly shines. Fully hand-made work, lines included, has grown rare enough that some call it a dying art, even as a wave of international interest has sent a new generation to train in the technique and carry it home.
What hasn't changed is the tradition behind the hand. Tebori is still passed through long apprenticeships, and when a master judges a student ready, they may grant a tattoo name carrying the "Hori-"prefix, a name given, not chosen, that ties the artist to a lineage & its responsibilities. The most recognized of these names is Horiyoshi III of Yokohama, who has spent decades arguing that traditional Japanese tattooing deserves to be seen as cultural heritage rather than criminal marking.
That argument still runs against an old current. In Japan, tattoos carry a lingering stigma tied to organized crime and to Edo-era punishment marks, and visible ink remains unwelcome at many bathhouses, gyms & pools. The legal ground, at least, has shifted: a landmark 2020 Supreme Court ruling held that tattooing is a form of artistic expression rather than a medical act, finally settling the question of whether artists could practice at all. The stigma is fading more slowly — but Tebori, the patient art of carving pictures into skin by hand, endures as one of the most quietly revered practices in the tattoo world.