No. It’s a realistic range. The artist sets the final quote after confirming size, placement, and any custom changes.
It reads the tattoo’s visible complexity—style, detail density, linework, shading, and color coverage—and maps that to typical time and pricing patterns.
Because pricing depends on time and artist rates, and both vary by studio, artist demand, and how the design is adapted to your body.
Clear, well-lit images where the tattoo is fully visible. Cropped, blurry, or heavily filtered photos will produce wider ranges.
Dense detail, realism, heavy shading, and full color coverage—because they add time and demand higher skill.
Use a close reference image. If you want major changes, treat the result as a starting point and confirm the final scope with the artist.