
LOCATED AT 205 VERNON ST. IN ROSEVILLE, CALIFORNIA FOR 34 YEARS. WITH A STAFF OF 12 MALE AND FEMALE ARTISTS TO SERVE YOU.
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| The Owner of WILD BILL’S | ||
| William Hill, owner of Wild Bill’s Tattooing in Roseville, California
built his first tattoo machine at age 14 and began experimenting with tattooing
on himself. His first tattoo was a girls name, his second tattoo was covering
it up. He never saw a tattoo studio until three years later, and knew at
that moment that’s what he wanted to do with his life. Wild Bill bought
his first tattoo business license in 1974. With a love of motorcycles that was passed down from his father, (also named Bill) the younger Bill rode around on his Harley raising hell. Being known to party a little too much and getting in trouble with the law, that’s what gave him the nick name Wild Bill. He decided to stop drinking at age 20. He noticed right away that things started to go much better for him after that. Wild Bill still has not drank to this day. |
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Wild Bill traveled to places like Virginia, Philadelphia, Texas, Seattle and Florida with a camera shooting photos everywhere he went and submitting them to magazines. He has had 1,000's of photos published in Easyriders, In The Wind, Iron Horse, Tattoo, Outlaw Biker and Biker Lifestyle. He also wrote articles to go along with the photos, covering the Motorcycle Ice Races, All Harley Drags and other biker events. In fact Wild Bill's all chrome 1966 shovelhead has been the centerfold and on the cover of more magazines than any other motorcycle to this date. When he wasn’t traveling, Wild Bill
tattooed his subjects, and this developed into a very busy career
of tattooing. |
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| Brian Everett and Jack Rudy, two of his tattoo
mentors, got him started going to custom car shows. This became an obsession
with him. Today his garage is full of custom show cars including a 1915
model-T speedster, 1925 stock model-T, 1932 Ford Phaeton, 1954 Porsche
Spyder, a shortened 1966 Volkswagen Van, 1964 Amphicar, 1959 Messerschmitt,
2002 Panoz AIV Roadster, 2005 Panoz Esperante, 2007 Pontiac Solstice and
three mini-cars. Wild Bill is both a tapestry of artwork and an artist. He has been named Best Tattooed Male at Tattoo Conventions four times. He has attended many shows and has a whole wall of trophies that he received, including: BEST TATTOOIST: 1988, 92, 98 BEST TATTOOED MALE: 1988, 91, 93, 94, MOST REALISTIC TATTOO: 1988, 91, 93, 94 BEST INDIVIDUAL TATTOO: 1987, 91, 99 BEST BACKPIECE: 1982, 89, 91 PEOPLES CHOICE: 1994, 98 BEST PORTRAIT: 1994, 95, 98 BEST TATTOO STUDIO: 1999, 00, 01, 02, 03, 04, 05 |
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| Wild Bill entered and won the logo contest
in 1984 for the anniversary logo on
Roseville’s outgoing mail cancellation mark. So all the out going mail
bears his artwork. In 2003, Kim Forrest organized the artists at Wild Bill’s to work a fifteen hour marathon for the Children’s Miracle Radiothon, which is put on by the U.C. Davis Children’s Hospital. Three TV and two radio stations ran stories that helped get the word out and raise over $6,000 for the cause. Then in 2004 they raised $11,603.00 and 2005 brought in $11,720.00 all for the UC Davis Children’s Hospital. |
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The walls of the studio are covered with artwork called flash, with a space covered in newspaper articles about Bill, his studio, and his cars. There are racks and racks of flash, cases of piercing jewelry (over 4,000 pieces) and waiting chairs sprinkled about as well. While you’re waiting you can look at the flash and jewelry, read one of the numerous articles, or just relax in one of the waiting chairs. Just don’t ask any dumb questions like "Does it hurt?"
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Wild Bill Hill The first time I walked into a tattoo shop in 1972 at age seventeen I knew that’s what I wanted to do with my life. I had been tattooing by hand and with machines that I built since I was 14. It took many years of 10-12 hour days, 7 days a week and hard work to get where I am today, make no mistake about that.I drew every spare moment I had, a lot of the time with a pen , so it was a lot like tattooing because there is no eraser. But pencil will always be my favorite medium . I liked the depth and dimension that could be achieved by making shadows in grays. At age 18 I got tattooed in Sacramento by Broadway Bob. I saw right away that wasn’t quite the style I was after. Then I Met Pete Stevens and started getting a lot of tattoos at “The East Coast Studio” in Sacramento on 16th + H Street by Pete, his partner Dennis and Bill Liberty. I remember getting tattooed by Bill and showing him my first so called professional tattoo machine. With the aspirations of opening my own tattoo shop, I told him, “all I need now is some people to practice on” and him telling me “with the art you’re doing, that shouldn’t be a problem“ He was right. |
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I decided on the town of Roseville because it had never had a tattoo shop. I
didn’t want to step on the toes of anyone that had helped me, unlike the
mentality of a lot of the new generation tattooist that open up right down the
street from established shops hoping to cash in on their success. It just does
not work that way and they will realize that when someone “opens up on
them”.
I then met Kevin Brady and liked his style of custom tattooing. That he did not
want to tattoo the same thing on two people impressed me. Kevin Brady had went
on the road with some rock and roll bands and was very hard to get in touch with.
He started making trips to my studio to work on my left thigh. One day he spent
10 ½ hours on a large roller skating skeleton on my leg. I told him I
wanted to get some of that oriental style of full body tattooing. Kevin showed
me the book “The Tattooist” with the work of Don Ed Hardy in it.
The photos of his work were awesome, unlike anything I had seen before.
San Francisco had a lot of tattoo shops so I visited every one. That’s where I met Pat Martynuik we hit it off right away. In fact the first day he grabbed me and said I had a bare spot. He tattooed me in less than fifteen minutes. I watched how efficient he ran his studio as he tattooed both my wrist in a Japanese style. Pat had no secrets, he taught me how to adjust machines and make needle bars with out wasting time.
Thinking I needed an Asian tattooist to achieve the oriental look I found Pinky Yang of Alameda. While he was tattooing on me he advised me to go see Don Ed Hardy if I wanted that oriental style. Well that’s all it took.
I tracked down Ed in San Francisco at his studio called “Tattoo City”. He was booked up but he introduced me to Bob Roberts who showed me a calendar with a tattoo of a girl pulling down her pants that was done by Jack Rudy. The moment I saw it I knew that’s the style I wanted to learn to do more than the oriental style. Bob then showed me photos of his work. It was this fantastic, single needle fine line all black and gray tattooing. After Bob did some of that work on me I was hooked. I knew I would never be the same. I threw away all the color ink I had and never did another color tattoo again. I started making monthly trips to see Bob and we became very close. He was very open with me, always willing to show me the solution to any problems. I learned all about needle clusters from him and always will be grateful. Bob would take this small town boy out on the big city streets of San Francisco after tattooing all day and show me things I had never seen before. I guess you could call that my coming of age. I finally got in to see Don Ed Hardy.
I was very impressed with the full coverage body tattoos he was doing.
My monthly trips started to include getting tattooed by Ed . A lot of
the time I would be tattooed by Ed 5-6 hours and then get worked on
by Bob 3-4 hours. That made for some long days, that’s for sure!
It would leave me very drained but I was starting to get the coverage
I was after. Ed was humble, a no nonsense tattooist unlike any other
I had ever met. Starting work at ten in the morning and wearing a tie
while he worked was not what I was used to. His whole outlook on life
was something I admired greatly. Ed told me “once you think you’re
the best you stop learning”. That’s something that has always
stayed with me. |
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Once my arms and both sides of my chest was completed I was ready for my ribs.
I knew it was going to be a major undertaking. I wanted large, big work. At the
time I belonged to 20+ tattoo clubs world wide. I had been writing the president
of the tattoo club of Japan and he had sent me some art work of a tattooed Japanese
woman. The moment I saw it I knew that’s what I wanted on my rib cage.
I took it to Ed and he worked on me a total of 8 ½ hours that day. For
the other rib cage I chose a tattooed woman drawn by Olivia. Ed spent 7 ½ hours
on that one. I will never forget the look on Olivia’s face when she saw
my tattoo for the first time at a tattoo convention in L.A.. She loved it and
said it was the first major tattoo of her art work she had seen. I noticed she
spent a lot of time taking photos of it.
I began hanging out at Henry Goldfields on the famous Broadway in San Francisco
watching the work of Greg Irons. He was a well know comic book artist that had
not been tattooing all that long but doing fantastic black and gray work. I was
fortunate to be able to get some portrait work by him before he passed away much
to young.
I booked five full days in December 1981 with Ed “Don the Dog” Hardy.
I showed up and Told Ed that I wanted a demon riding a motorcycle all in black
and gray covering my entire back and butt. Ed was know to be doing the best color
work in the U.S. He said if I wanted black and gray, I should go to L.A. and
see Jack Rudy, “He likes to do that type of high detail mechanical work“.
I told him no, I wanted him to do it. After it was finished on the fifth
day, Bob worked on my solar plexus. That made for a lot of tattoo work for
sure. Afterwards
Ed invited me to dinner and the Hot baths with about ten other people with
body suits in progress at the Japan center. I was quite honored. A lot of
Ed will
always be with me, (not just because he did the majority of my tattoos) but
because he had a very large impact on my life. |
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Kim Forrest did my left lower leg and kneecap. Including portraits of my father and a life size Harry Houdini holding a king of clubs. My love for the black and gray style of tattooing seems to have been instilled in her also. She is a very fast and efficient addition to the studio. Kim seems to be able to do every style with the same high quality and attention to detail. Her list of clients include most of our local NBA team the Sacramento Kings. Harley Haslem another talented artist
working here in my studio tattooed parts of my ankles and the tops
of my feet. I always thought I would be glad when my body suit was
finished. But I am always finding things I would like on me but don’t
have the room anymore. So always be picky what you get tattooed on
yourself. |
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