DETROIT — Colin Farrell's had it done — many times. So have Angelina Jolie and Megan Fox. Heck, even Bart Simpson did.
Whether it's Marilyn Monroe's face, Billy Bob Thornton's name, a sultry rose or even Bart's partially inscribed homage to his mother, some tattoos simply have to go for one reason or many others.
But the process of taking them off is longer, much more costly and ouch — extremely more painful than getting them put on, according to professionals in the industry.
Also, due to health reasons, some souls who braved the ink needle, should be wary of the laser when having their body art erased or covered up.
Tattoos have been around for centuries
The oldest known tattoos were found on remains of a Neolithic man who lived in the Italian Alps around 3,000 B.C. Many mummies from ancient Egypt also have tattoos, as do remains from cultures around the world.
Tattoo removal likely is almost as old as the practice of inking and included scraping the skin to get the pigments off or out.
A more ''civilized'' method evolved in the 1960s when Leon Goldman, a University of Cincinnati dermatologist, used ''hot vapor bursts'' from a laser on tattoos and the skin that bore them.