Geometric tattoos shine in InkedMag’s weekly artist spotlight
Rico Hamilton’s @ricogeometry landed in InkedMag’s June 22 roundup, putting precision-driven geometry beside the week’s most scroll-stopping tattoo work.

InkedMag’s June 22 weekly tattoo roundup lined up seven Instagram feeds, from @calo_____ and @raphael_tiraf to @sztuka_wojny, @pantelion.raw, @ricogeometry, @paintedharts and @joshuabeatsontattoo, as a snapshot of the work that caught the magazine’s eye. The format was pure feed culture: the magazine framed the tattoos as pieces showing talent, creativity and serious skill, while the artists’ own posts did the visual heavy lifting. For geometric tattoo fans, the standout was @ricogeometry, a handle that signaled precision-based work sitting comfortably inside the same weekly showcase as abstract, surreal, black-and-grey and technical pieces.
The lineup also put names behind the handles. InkedMag identified @sztuka_wojny as Jerome | TATTOOS, @pantelion.raw as Ruben Valerii Kravets and @ricogeometry as Rico Hamilton. That matters in a scene where discovery often starts with an image and ends with a follow, because the roundup was built to push readers from a magazine carousel into live artist feeds. For geometric artists, that path is the real test of durability: a design has to read instantly in a crowded post, but it also has to hold structure, balance and clarity once the initial scroll-speed appeal fades.
The June 22 post did not stand alone. InkedMag published another weekly roundup on June 15 and described that selection as featuring tattoos that were “impossible to ignore,” a useful clue to the editorial lane these posts occupy. A separate InkedMag feature, “Jaw-Dropping Geometric Tattoos,” had already put geometric specialists in focus, highlighting work built around sacred geometry, Fibonacci sequences and other pattern-heavy designs. Taken together, the two formats show a steady interest in tattooing that relies on construction as much as spectacle.
Geometry has deep roots beyond the app feed. It is one of the oldest branches of mathematics, and tattooing has been practiced in most parts of the world for thousands of years. That makes Rico Hamilton’s place in the June 22 lineup feel less like a novelty slot and more like a clear marker of where the larger tattoo conversation is landing right now: in work that can catch attention fast, then reward a closer look with structure, symmetry and control.
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