Blueface Explains New Face Tattoos On N3on’s Livestream

NEW YORK, NEW YORK – SEPTEMBER 14: Blueface attends Daniels Leather Fashion Show at Blue Moon on September 14, 2022 in New York City. (Photo by Johnny Nunez/WireImage)

Blueface is back on livestreams and already explaining the new ink he picked up during his two-year prison stretch.

The Los Angeles rapper appeared on a recent stream with creator N3on, where a simple question about whether the facility had tattoo artists sparked a deeper breakdown of how prison life shaped the artwork now covering his face. Logos on Blueface’s face include Chase, Wallgreens, and MLB.

Blueface said the most striking tattoo came straight from the environment he woke up to each day. Inside the unit, a message painted on a wall read, “Warning, no warning shots fired in this building.”

According to him, staring at that phrase every morning eventually pushed him to turn it into permanent ink. Laughing as he retold it, he said he told the artist, “Put that shit on my face,” explaining that the prison’s energy seeped into him over time.

From there, he pivoted to the markings tied to the School Yard Crips, the set he’s repped since his rise. He pointed out a large “Y” and other symbols tied to School Yard, saying they weren’t fashion statements or trendy graphics.

Blueface’s New Face Tattoos

To Blueface, they’re neighborhood markers—signals of where he’s from and who he stands with. He added that people outside his world often misread the tattoos as logos instead of identity pieces. Mentioning “YSL” in the same context, he framed all of it as part of a larger hood language that outsiders don’t always understand.

Blueface also highlighted one tattoo he connected to the streetwear brand Undefeated. He said the symbol reflects how he sees himself after surviving prison, calling himself “undefeated” with his usual mix of bravado and deadpan confidence.

“I’m fuckin’ undefeated—no cap, dead homies,” he said, insisting the ink represents more than aesthetics.

Across the livestream, Blueface presented the tattoos as a direct extension of his time inside—shaped by the violence, politics, and survival mindset that define prison culture. His breakdown made clear that each piece carries a story tied to neighborhood pride, personal resilience, or the atmosphere he lived in for two years.

And for Blueface, the markings aren’t about reinvention—they’re about returning home with the symbols of what he endured and who he remains.


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

X