Dustin Gormley is the artist whose work makes you do a double-take at a flash wall and then look again. The first look reads as straight American Traditional — bold black outlines, flat color, a classical rose, a panther, an anchor. The second look catches the shift. Maybe the rose is the wrong color — cool teal instead of the expected red, like a flower from a slightly different planet. Maybe the pineapple has a skull face and the aviator sunglasses on the skull are reflecting a Waikiki sunset. Maybe the sea turtle is rendered as a watercolor wash instead of the solid-color treatment that classical traditional would call for.

That second look — the one where the trippy perspective surfaces — is Dustin's signature. He's a traditional artist, full stop. The drawing fundamentals are all there: the keyline weight, the planar color, the iconography that works because tattooers spent a hundred years making sure it works. But Dustin pulls each piece through one quiet act of perspective-shifting that the classical-only artists rarely allow themselves. The rules are honored. They're just bent.

The portfolio: traditional with a twist

Look through Dustin's recent work and the pattern is consistent:

  • A traditional rose — but the petals graduate from cool teal to cobalt, the leaves are sea green, the whole bloom reads underwater. Classical drawing, shifted palette.
  • A pineapple-skull hybrid with aviator sunglasses, and the sunglasses' lenses reflect a Waikiki sunset — silhouetted palms, a low orange sun. Three Traditional motifs welded into one composition.
  • A full leg sleeve built from stacked mandalas — hip crown, mid-thigh pendant, dense honeycomb at the knee, lotus-and-geometry stack at the calf. Sacred-geometry architecture drawn freehand to the body's contour.
  • A watercolor sea turtle on a thigh — soft pinks and teals, sketchy pencil-line keyline deliberately left exposed, no hard outline. Soft-edge medium-twist on a Traditional subject.
  • A Polynesian honu silhouette on an ankle with a tiny plumeria nested inside the shell — minimal weight, maximum signal.
  • A hammerhead shark mid-strike, crossing a green-and-red Sailor-style anchor. Classical setup, classical execution.

The composition skill is what makes the "trippy" framing work. Dustin doesn't reach for surreal to disguise drawing weakness — he reaches for it because his drawing is strong enough to carry the experiment.

"American Traditional rooted in fundamentals — bold lines, solid color, classic iconography — bent through a trippy perspective all his own."

Why Ohana is the right room

Ohana Tattoo Company on Saratoga Road is built for a certain kind of artist — one who can sit a walk-in client for a $200 flash piece, then move to a custom three-hour color piece, then close the night on a chest panel. Dustin is that kind of artist. Walk-in flash energy on Tuesday afternoon. Multi-hour custom architecture on Thursday evening. The same chair handles both.

It also helps that Dustin's perspective-twisting compositions are exactly what tourist and kamaʻāina clients in Waikiki are actually looking for — Traditional drawing they've seen before, plus something they haven't. He gets the request all the time: "Do this classic thing, but make it weird in a Dustin way."

How to book Dustin

Walk-ins are welcome at Ohana — pick from the flash wall or text ahead. For larger custom pieces or anything with a real composition twist, book ahead so Dustin can draw it.

Book a session with Dustin

Text (808) 582-8081 with your idea, reference, size, and placement. Tell him you want a Dustin-specific composition twist if that's what you're after.

Text · (808) 582-8081 See Dustin's full portfolio

Further reading