Thanks to a sound wave tattoo, this teen can listen to her late grandma's voicemail recording
Voicemails can get deleted, but tattoos are forever
Updated: 3:56 PM EST Jan 9, 2018
What if you could preserve a recording of a lost loved one's voice forever with a tattoo? Would you get one? Chicago teen Sakyrah Morris didn't think twice about having the sound waves of one of her late grandmother's voicemails tattooed across her heart, according to WTSP. Now she can listen to the sweet message anytime she wants, thanks to an app created by a company called Skin Motion.Morris just has to hover her iPhone camera over her tattoo—an exact replica of the voicemail's sound waves—and the technology activates her grandma's voice. Morris recently tweeted a video of the sound wave tattoo in action, and it has already received more than 75,000 retweets.In the tweet, Morris explains that just before she passed away, her grandma left her a voicemail wishing her a happy birthday. Because it was one of the last times Morris heard her grandma's voice, she wanted to find a way to preserve it forever.Morris hired artist Shane Hallock at Ritual Addictions Tattoo in Glendale, AZ create the tattoo.Since Morris' tweet went viral, she's also shared several photos and a sweet message saying that her grandma was "everything.""Words can't explain how much I miss her," she wrote. "Every blessing that is being sent my way right now is because of her."(h/t People)
What if you could preserve a recording of a lost loved one's voice forever with a tattoo? Would you get one?
Chicago teen Sakyrah Morris didn't think twice about having the sound waves of one of her late grandmother's voicemails tattooed across her heart, according to . Now she can listen to the sweet message anytime she wants, thanks to an app created by a company called .
Morris just has to hover her iPhone camera over her tattoo—an exact replica of the voicemail's sound waves—and the technology activates her grandma's voice. Morris recently tweeted a video of the sound wave tattoo in action, and it has already received more than .
In the tweet, Morris explains that just before she passed away, her grandma left her a voicemail wishing her a happy birthday. Because it was one of the last times Morris heard her grandma's voice, she wanted to find a way to preserve it forever.
Morris hired artist Shane Hallock at in Glendale, AZ create the .
Since Morris' tweet went viral, she's also and a sweet message saying that her grandma was "everything."
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"Words can't explain how much I miss her," she wrote. "Every blessing that is being sent my way right now is because of her."
(h/t )