The Hamilton Spectator

‘DNA tattoo’ lets you take them with you

A growing list of biohackers, artists and technologi­sts are dabbling in the world of biogenic tattoo artistry

- MIKE ISAAC

It all began with a floating leg.

Or, more specifical­ly, an idea came tattooed on the leg of a woman kicking through the water in Key Largo, Fla., seen clear as day through Patrick Duffy’s diving goggles. Duffy, who ran a scuba diving therapeuti­c program for military veterans with his father, was inspired by the tattoo; it was her dedication to her late husband, a Navy SEAL killed in combat.

“In that moment, I thought, ‘Wouldn’t it be cool to turn that tattoo into a reliquary?’” Duffy said. “To put a piece of something she cared about, maybe even her husband, into the tattoo itself ?”

Four years, a handful of dedicated colleagues and nearly a dozen patents later, Duffy has brought the idea to life with Everence, a product he and his partners hope will deepen bonds — in the most literal and physical way — between family, friends and loved ones.

It is about as biological­ly intimate as one can get. Everence is a powdery substance synthesize­d from a sample of DNA, something as simple as a few thousand cells from a swab of a person’s inner cheek, or from cremated ashes. A small vial of Everence can be brought to a tattoo artist and added to any type of ink.

The result: A tattoo imbued with the DNA of another human being — or, if you prefer, a dog, cat or other furry friend.

Duffy and Endeavor Life Sciences, his company, join the ranks of a winding list of biohackers, artists and technologi­sts dabbling in the world of biogenic tattoo artistry. Many have mixed ash, hair or other material with inks to include organics in tattooing for years.

But that practice has long been left to undergroun­d artists, a subculture unto itself with a dark, self-aware nickname: “morbid ink.” So far, this has been something of a symbolic gesture, as the organic material introduced into their inks would eventually be absorbed into a subject’s body.

Others write off the practice as part of the growing bodyhackin­g movement. Biohackers are often looked down on by scientists for their more relaxed, or more adventurou­s, approach to ethical questions in medicine.

The practice of has been reanimated, so to speak, by armchair enthusiast­s. There is the DIY crowd, such as Skin46, which seeks to raise money on Kickstarte­r for biogenic tattoo efforts based on hair samples. CGLabs, a Canadian outfit, is pioneering its own method, primarily marketed as DNA preservati­on.

Everence takes a different approach. Customers are asked to mail their DNA samples to Endeavor’s laboratory in Quonset, R.I., where the material is milled, sterilized and enclosed in microscopi­c capsules which is often used in medical applicatio­ns like dentures, bone cement and cosmetic surgery.

Thanks to its little envelope, instead of the DNA disappeari­ng into the body, it is captured permanentl­y in the ink of the tattoo.

The pitch is a curious, emotionall­y poignant one coming from Duffy, a gruff, plain-spoken New Yorker with a background in real estate and a degree in political science. But after starting the nonprofit therapeuti­c scuba diving program for veterans with his father nearly a decade ago, Duffy, 40, said he was inspired to find new ways of connecting people while honouring those they may have lost.

A rube to the worlds of both tattoo artistry and biomedical engineerin­g, Duffy spent the past four years seeking out experts in both fields, eventually finding advisers including Dr. Bruce Klitzman, an associate professor of surgery at Duke University, who endorses the practice.

Under the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion, tattoo inks are viewed as cosmetics, a designatio­n that Everence will also adopt. Historical­ly, the agency has not regulated them.

Duffy also found a partner in Virginia Elwood, a 37-year-old tattoo artist in Brooklyn who was taken by the idea almost immediatel­y. Their meeting was a stroke of fate: Duffy’s email was sent to her spam folder, and she opened it only because she thought he was the actor who played the father on the 1990s sitcom “Step by Step.”

Alas, it was a different Duffy, though Elwood took him up on his idea. She shares a matching tattoo with her partner, Stephanie Tamez, each with the other’s Everence inked in. Elwood also plans to get a tattoo with Everence containing DNA from her mother, who died years ago from cancer.

“We’re connected to so many things in this world right now, be it through social media or sticking photos in the cloud, and I find that personally to be a bit hollow sometimes,” Elwood said. “So instead of taking something precious to me and uploading a picture of it to a server, I’m actually carrying it on my body, in my skin.”

 ?? COLIN DEVON MOORE, NEW YORK TIMES ?? Patrick Duffy and his company, Endeavor Life Sciences, have created microscopi­c capsules that carry DNA which can be carried by tattoo ink.
COLIN DEVON MOORE, NEW YORK TIMES Patrick Duffy and his company, Endeavor Life Sciences, have created microscopi­c capsules that carry DNA which can be carried by tattoo ink.
 ?? NATHAN BAJAR, NEW YORK TIMES ?? Virginia Elwood, a tattoo artist, shares a matching tattoo with her partner, Stephanie Tamez, made with ink that contains each partner’s DNA.
NATHAN BAJAR, NEW YORK TIMES Virginia Elwood, a tattoo artist, shares a matching tattoo with her partner, Stephanie Tamez, made with ink that contains each partner’s DNA.

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