Hands that don't shake
Nala's first contact with a tattoo was at a Polokwane market. She was fourteen. A guy was tattooing with a homemade machine between fruit stalls and clearance racks. The lines were crooked, the hygiene left a lot to be desired, but the sound of the needle on skin froze her in place. She stood watching for an hour. "If you want to learn, bring me coffee." She brought coffee three Saturdays. On the fourth, he let her practice on synthetic skin. The lines were terrible. The hand didn't shake.
That — the hand that doesn't shake — is what defined her. Not talent, not artistic vision, not style. The steadiness of the hand. Koko Mapula, her grandmother, had trained it without knowing: threading sewing needles for her from age six, sewing buttons onto shirts they sold at the market from age eight. Nala's fingers learned precision before they knew what it would be used for.
At eighteen she went to Johannesburg and apprenticed under Tshepo, a Braamfontein tattooist who did African blackwork with a cleanness Nala had thought impossible. Tshepo didn't teach with words. He taught by letting her watch and making her clean. A full year before Nala touched human skin. "If you can't wait, you can't tattoo." Nala could wait. When she finally did her first complete tattoo — a geometric fern on the forearm, three hours, the needle marking the skin as if counting — Tshepo said nothing. When she finished, a black spike collar was on the table and a note: "Don't take it off."







