A frontal portrait of an Indigenous Caribbean woman rendered in a bold, traditional tattoo-inspired illustration style. The subject faces forward with a calm, grounded expression, eyes level and steady, conveying strength, dignity, and self-possession. Her face is marked with deep red ceremonial paint applied symmetrically but imperfectly, including a strong vertical line running down the center of the face and additional angular markings extending outward across the cheeks. The paint appears hand-applied, matte, and organic, following facial bone structure rather than decorative symmetry. Her hair is long, dark, and straight, falling evenly on both sides of her face with blunt-cut bangs resting just above the eyebrows. Subtle texture is visible in the hair, with individual strands suggested through confident ink lines rather than realism. She wears a traditional-style necklace composed of rounded beads and a central pendant inspired by Indigenous Caribbean symbolism. The pendant is bold, graphic, and carved in appearance, sitting firmly at the upper chest and acting as a visual anchor for the composition. The illustration uses thick black outlines, limited shading, and a restrained color palette dominated by black, deep red, and muted bone tones. The surface texture resembles aged ink or printmaking, with visible grain and slight irregularities. The overall composition is iconic and symmetrical, designed to read clearly at a distance, evoking traditional tattoo flash, See more