He spent $60K becoming unforgettable. Now he’s erasing himself — for her.
Ethan “ModBoy” Bramble built his identity in ink. Over 200 tattoos. A split tongue. A removed belly button. Tattooed eyeballs. Then his daughter was born — and everything changed.
Who is Ethan Bramble?
Ethan Bramble, 24, is from Melbourne, Australia. He began modifying his body at age 11, starting with stretched earlobes. Over the next decade, he became known online as “the world’s most modified youth,” spending an estimated AUD $60,000 (roughly $39,000 USD) on tattoos and surgical alterations.
The turning point
Becoming a father shifted his perspective. Speaking on LadBibleTV’s No Filter series, Ethan admitted: “I guess you could say I regret some tattoos. Not just regret; it’s more about wanting to be perceived differently”.
The catalyst wasn’t vanity. It was protection.
“The face is a big thing,” he explained. “It can lead to so many issues. I wouldn’t want my daughter to have to deal with those until she’s older. I wish I hadn’t gone so extreme with my face”.
He noticed the stares. The whispers. The judgment — not aimed at him, but at his little girl holding his hand.
The removal journey
About 12 months ago, Ethan began laser tattoo removal — starting with his face.
The process is sectioned, painful, and repetitive: “I’ve gone over the full area six or seven times.”
He ties the decision to mental health: “A lot of the anxiety I was feeling might have stemmed from having a face full of tattoos. I’m happy with how I look, but I’m also happy knowing that in two years, my face tattoos will fade more and more. It’s like clearing the canvas”.
⚠️ Note: Some viral posts claim he has “removed all tattoos” — this is inaccurate. Removal is partial, ongoing, and focused primarily on visible areas like his face.
Why this story resonates
Ethan’s journey taps into a universal tension: the desire for self-expression versus the responsibility of parenthood. His story isn’t about rejecting his past — it’s about evolving for someone else’s future.
Social media reactions have been mixed. Supporters praise his courage: “Full respect to him for undergoing such a brave change!”
Critics question the initial choices. But Ethan’s message stays focused: “It’s not nice to live in the shadows, so just express yourself 100 per cent” — and sometimes, that expression changes.
The bigger picture
Tattoo removal demand has surged globally, with laser technology making reversal more accessible. But Ethan’s story highlights something deeper: identity isn’t static. What feels empowering at 18 may feel complicated at 24 — especially when your choices impact someone you love more than yourself.
One last thought
Ethan isn’t erasing who he was. He’s making space for who he’s becoming — a dad who’d rather his daughter be seen for her smile, not his ink.
As he put it: “I’m just clearing the canvas.”
What would you change — if it meant giving someone you love a softer path forward?