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Vernon
Franc Ingemarson
(1919-1988)
Vernon
Ingemarson, also
known as "Sailor
Vern", was born
May 26, 1919. During
the course of his
career, Vern worked
on both the east
and west coasts.
In the late 1940s,
he spent some time
in Norfolk Virginia
with "Cap" Coleman,
and it was there
that he and Paul
Rogers first met.
The picture below
shows Sailor Vern
(right) and Paul
Rogers. According
to health department
records, in 1947
Vern open his own
shop at 512 East
Main Street, Norfolk,
just down the street
from Coleman. Research
done by the Archive
in 1991 found no
record of this
shop in Norfolk's
city directory.

Vern also operated arcade-type
tattoo shops on San Francisco's
Market Street. During his later
years when Vern lived in San Francisco,
he built tattoo machines for many
local artists. Sailor Vern learned
a lot of his machine skill from
the Coleman/Barr school as Paul
Rogers had done before him. The
frames that he built in the 1970s
and 1980s were gas welded. Using
one-eighth inch strap steel, Vern
designed a practical machine that
he could easily produce in the
basement of his home in San Francisco.

Most of the frames were engraved
with "Sailor Vern" and sometimes
a small anchor design was engraved
on the frame as well. Because of
the simple side bar design, Vern's
frames were easily built as left
or right-handed machines. All of
Vern's machines came with a tube
assembly that he made from brass
tubing, usually with a rubber hose
grip. By the mid-1980s Vern began
to lose his eyesight and this put
a damper on his machine work.
Vern died of pneumonia on July
21, 1988. His sizable tattoo collection
was sold to Jane Nemhauser.
Tattoo Archive © 1992
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