字幕列表 影片播放 列印英文字幕 Narrator: As a female with tattoos, I started to notice a trend. When I walked into tattoo shops there were hardly any women artists. But if you look around, more females than males have tattoos. According to a 2015 study, 31% of females have tattoos, while only 27% of men do. If you look at those giving the tattoos, it's mostly males. Only one in six tattoo artists were women, according to a 2010 study. So where are the women tattoo artists? I went on a search and found Shanzey Afzal, owner of Ink Minx, a mobile, female-run tattoo shop. She created her one-woman shop prioritizing women and non-binary customers. - Being a female tattoo artist was really tough to learn. Tattoo shops are very male-dominated. And nobody wanted to teach me, being a young woman. I had to go through my apprenticeship, which I feel was much tougher than the males' apprenticeship. I had to be tougher than somebody else would have had to be. Narrator: Today, Shanzey says her tattoo shop inside of an old-school trailer is her safe space. - I made the choice to tattoo women and non-binary customers because I saw that they really sought a different service and that there was a huge market for it. Women-only services are non-discriminatory and proven to be effective in creating participation in industries. Narrator: Shanzey used a loan to buy her trailer. But in order to expand her business she needs investors. She's been applying for new loans and looking for investors since 2016. But she hasn't had much luck yet. And she isn't alone. In 2016, women-owned businesses accounted for only 18@00:01:56,750 --> 00:02:00,000 of the total number of approved 7(a) small business loans. - I think if I was a white man I would have more of a likelihood to land these meetings. I think white men come off as less of a hazard. They're more marketable. Young Pakistani Muslim women are different. And anything that's different is more of a risk. Narrator: And if women are able to get their foot in the door, they don't see as much money compared to their male counterparts. In 2016, Fundera reported that women received 2.5 times less money on average for small business loans than men did. These small loan amounts are not the result of there being fewer businesses owned by women. In fact, over the last 20 years, the number of women-owned businesses has more than doubled. Even more specifically, businesses owned by women of color grew four times that rate in 20 years. - I love being a female business owner. And I love being a woman of color. I think the most exciting part of it for me is inspiring other young women.
B1 中級 美國腔 作為一個女性紋身師的挑戰 (Challenges Of Being A Female Tattoo Artist) 16 0 Mackenzie 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日 更多分享 分享 收藏 回報 影片單字