This image presents a cohesive black-and-grey sleeve concept that merges ancient Egyptian iconography with a nocturnal mood. The central motif features two jackal heads reminiscent of Anubis facing a moonlit horizon. The collars around the necks are rendered as intricate hieroglyphic bands and geometric patterns, lending a graphic pattern element to the piece. Behind, a monumental stairway descends into glowing cloud banks toward a solitary statue standing before a row of pylons and towering columns, creating a sense of rite and journey. The composition is designed for a full sleeve, with the three panels wrapping around the arm, so that the jackal heads appear to converse as the limb bends. The shading is meticulously built in black and grey, with smooth transitions from deep inky blacks to mid-tones and crisp white highlights that give depth to the dog’s musculature and the ancient stone textures. The moon dominates the upper background, its cratered surface echoing the texture of the stones and creating a high-contrast focal point. The artwork emphasizes balance between natural forms and architectural geometry, and the serene, almost meditative expression of the jackal heads evokes ritual meaning—guardianship, transition, and the afterlife. The pattern elements extend into the friezes and columns, offering a graphic rhythm that appeals to enthusiasts of fine line tattoo techniques while remaining bold enough for a large scale. In practice, this concept functions well as a cover-up for older, darker tattoos and could be adapted to emphasize or de-emphasize certain elements for a custom tattoo design. The concept is AI-generated tattoo project, intended for realistic tattoo execution in black and grey. It leverages traditional Japanese and Egyptian-inspired motifs, weaving them into a modern body art piece that speaks to lovers of temple imagery, nocturnal symbolism, and monumental sleeve designs. The design is suitable for meaningful tattoos that explore identity, passage, and reverence, and the use of strong shapes and negative space makes it adaptable for various placements while staying true to the selected motifs of jackal heads, moon, pyramid, and stair-well architecture.