
Britain's most tattooed man who's spent £40k transforming his entire body reveals how he looked before getting inked
Mathew Whelan, 45, from Birmingham, who legally changed his name to King of Ink Land King Body Art The Extreme Ink-ite, has spent a whopping £40,000 and more than 1,600 hours under the needle.
4
4
Now covered head to toe in black and grey body art, from his shaved scalp to the soles of his feet, and even his eyeballs, resurfaced photos show just how much he's changed.
Snaps from when he was just 16 and 18 show the now-inked-up icon with a fresh face, buzz cut, and smooth skin.
In one shot, a young Mathew poses proudly with his very first tattoo which was a bulldog on his arm.
Fast forward nearly three decades and he's had his eyes permanently dyed black, nipples removed, ears reshaped, and almost no visible skin untouched by ink.
The transformation began when he was just nine years old after developing a fascination with tattoos and body mods and over the years, he's pushed it to the extreme.
He even holds a world record for the most tattoo artists working on him at once, after 36 tattooists inked him simultaneously at a Derby expo in 2016.
But going full body art hasn't come without complications.
His tattoos have caused him physical damage.
He told The Sun Online that the knuckle duster implant has done nerve damage but he hopes his arm can be saved - although this is undetermined until surgeons operate.
This week, King of Ink Land revealed he's been locked out of adult websites because facial recognition software can't recognise his face, mistaking it for a mask due to the heavy ink.
He believes it's another example of being unfairly treated based on how he looks and said his face is as much a part of his identity as his name.
He told the Metro: 'It's as important as the name really and I changed my name legally.
'Without a name you haven't got an identity, and it's the same with a face. It's my skin, my permanent identity.'
King of Ink got his first tatt when he was 16 and has since splashed £40,000 on body modifications.
He told how he had his nipples cut off to make room for more inkings and keeps them in his freezer 'next to his sprouts'.
He's also admitted that day-to-day life can be tough.
In 2015 he admitted his unusual looks were making it hard for him to find a job.
He has since called for an end to discrimination towards people with body modifications, claiming he has been the victim of a 'hate crime' due to his extraordinary appearance.
People avoid sitting next to him on buses, he gets stared at constantly, and strangers often try to sneak photos, which can sometimes lead to confrontation.
Mathew previously shared how his boss hid him because he hated his tattoos.
But despite the challenges, he says it's a lifestyle he chose and loves, even if it has to take a back seat for now.
The tattoo lover has recently announced he's pausing his inking habit to focus on paying off his £66,000 mortgage, saying he's putting his tattoo journey 'on hold' while he clears his debts.
He still plans to get the odd tattoo every couple of years, but says it's time to be sensible, even if it means scaling back the extreme ink.
He also revealed plans to remove some of his past body mods, including a hand implant, saying that although his transformation is a huge part of his identity, he's always evolving.
4
4
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
14 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Cruel and heartless... but this isn't Brooklyn's doing: Beckham friends' verdict on wife Nicola, the heartbroken hidden victims and who's really pulling the strings - as they tell KATIE HIND Brooklyn's worrying new nickname
Pouting and almost naked, Nicola Peltz poses alongside her mother Claudia shortly after she renewed her wedding vows. They both look delighted, as if they are having the best day of their lives. And why not? Those who know the Beckhams say it is this picture that seals their triumph. They have well and truly taken over Nicola's husband Brooklyn, now Brooklyn Peltz Beckham.


BBC News
16 minutes ago
- BBC News
Actor Larry Lamb to share war poems at Hereford festival
Actor Larry Lamb said headlining the UK's first Military History Festival would allow him to read war poetry he has loved since is to share poetry and anecdotes at College Hall, Hereford Cathedral, on 27 September, the second day of the three-day said his father was "mad keen" on poetry and read to him from anthologies after surviving World War Two."He would read me poems that really appealed to him and they kind of stuck," Lamb said. "There's two or three of them that I really loved as a kid and still do now." The festival will bring together 40 authors, historians and military experts from 26 to 28 September at the cathedral, The Green Dragon Hotel and the Castle Green said during his event he would also be sharing his own personal poetry "which fits the bill".The actor said he had recently returned to writing poetry after a long hiatus, and had been keen for the festival to feature the in the year he released his debut novel, All Wrapped Up, about a film crew who travel to the Caribbean to make a film but find everything goes described writing as like "an extended improvisation", but that he needed total solitude to achieve his goal of 1,000 words a day."I have to be completely locked away. I have to be isolated, I can't have any interference. I don't watch any television, any films, listen to radio, read anything at all, I just shut off. And that's it," he said. The festival will also feature discussions with Kate Adie, Philippe Sands and Claire Mulley, exploring global military history through a variety of full line-up is available on the festival website. Follow BBC Hereford & Worcester on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.


The Guardian
16 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Fringe benefits from Miriam Margolyes for the Cambridge Footlights
Your Edinburgh festival article ('It's a brigade of old gits!' Miriam Margolyes, Andy Linden and the older performers storming Edinburgh, 12 August) mentions Miriam Margolyes' appearance in the 1963 Cambridge Footlights revue. I stage-managed that show and have many happy memories of it. The custom was that only one girl student would be included in the cast, something Miriam fiercely disapproved of. Still etched in my memory is her line as she sashayed down to front centre stage: 'Here I come, one rose in a bunch of pansies!' It was an end-of-an-era moment – the following year there were two girls in the FellWinchester Nesrine Malik says 10 out of 14 recent posts on X by Keir Starmer were about immigration and small-boat arrivals (Here's the truth about Britain's immigration hysteria: Starmer and co have whipped it up to get cheap votes, 11 August). Well, that really cut through to the racist mob in Nuneaton on Saturday. They ended their protest by marching through the streets chanting 'Keir Starmer is a wanker'.Andy PettitCoventry Good Friday is not a 'movable feast' (Letters, 11 August)(Letters, 12 August)(Letters, 11 August). Yes, it is movable day, as the date is set according to the lunar cycle, but it is definitely not a feast day. No communion happens. It's part of the point of the Canon John Longuet-HigginsHartpury, Gloucestershire So Japanese interval walking is the latest exercise trend (Japanese interval walking: the viral exercise trend that could put a spring in your step, 9 August)? In my younger days, we called it 'Scouts' pace' and knew that it was the quickest way to get MeredithDursley, Gloucestershire Surely Jeremy Corbyn's new party should be called New Old Labour (Letters, 11 August)?David ProtheroHarlington, Bedfordshire Have an opinion on anything you've read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section.