At the beginning of the Meiji period the Japanese government, wanting to  protect its image and make a good impression on the West, outlawed  tattoos, and irezumi took on connotations of criminality. Nevertheless,  fascinated foreigners went to Japan seeking the skills of tattoo  artists, and traditional tattooing continued underground.
Tattooing  was legalized by the occupation forces in 1945, but has retained its  image of criminality. For many years, traditional Japanese tattoos were  associated with the yakuza, Japan's notorious mafia, and many businesses  in Japan (such as public baths, fitness centers and hot springs) still  ban customers with tattoos.
Tattooing and other forms of body  decoration and body modification, as in much of the western world, are  gaining in popularity in Japan. However, Japanese young people who  choose to get tattooed are most often choosing "one point" designs --  small designs that can be completed in one sitting -- usually in the  American or tribal styles. More recently, however sanskrit Siddham  script tattoos are becoming more and more fashionable.
Traditional  irezumi is still done by specialist tattooists, but it is painful,  time-consuming and expensive: a typical traditional body suit (covering  the arms, back, upper legs and chest, but leaving an untattooed space  down the center of the body) can take one to five years of weekly visits  to complete and cost in excess of US$30,000.
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