Tattoo Fixers star Jay Hutton has blamed George Clooney for sparking the "worst" tattoo trend thanks to the large tribal inking seen on the actor's arm in the film From Dusk Till Dawn.

The celebrity tattoo artist said he is not a fan of the bold look, a style that took hold in the late 1990s among many ink-lovers and one that Hutton claimed many of his customers regret today.

Hutton told the Press Association: "Black tribal tattoos are the worst things. They went through a stage, it all started - I think - with From Dusk Till Dawn, with George Clooney with a big tribal thing up his arm.

"He started the craze, the big black lines on the arms."

Hutton said: "To see that now - I don't personally know anybody that is happy with it that has one.

"I think they all realise it was a spur-of-the-moment thing, from that era."

Hutton rose to fame on E4's Tattoo Fixers, a reality show in which clients with unwanted inkings go into their studio to have it covered up or amended.

But Hutton said tribal tattoos are "one of the hardest to cover up".

He has also urged those wishing to get inked to not copy the looks of their favourite celebrities, something he sees all too often.

"A lot of people who get tattoos copy other people. I remember years ago when David Beckham got his angel sleeve and it was massive at the time, and I know a lot of people copied him," he said.

"They wanted the same sleeve and that's not personal to you, and obviously it is a permanent thing you have to live with for the rest of your life."

Hutton said: "That tattoo obviously means something to David Beckham but it probably doesn't mean anything to the guy down the road who has just copied him."

Hutton is to lend his expertise in the body art arena to new E4 series Tattoo Artist Of The Year, in which he and renowned tattoo artist Rose Hardy will put 10 professional tattooists against each other to see will be crowned the best in the country.

Sign up to our free newsletters

Get the best updates straight to your inbox:
Please select at least one mailing list.

You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By subscribing, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing.