AI-generated tattoo project presents a bold black and grey portrait of a woman crowned by skulls, with a spiderweb motif on the forehead and birds circling the composition. The design blends neoclassical portraiture and Dia de los Muertos symbolism, using fine line shading to build depth and a dramatic halo of stylized leaves behind the head. The central face is rendered with careful contouring—soft gradient skin, delicate high cheekbones, and a stitched mouth that nods to sugar skull aesthetics—while the skulls above act as a stark, echoed crown. The piece uses a restrained grayscale palette to emphasize light and shadow, with fine lines weaving through the hair, forehead, and cape-like curves that frame the torso area. The surrounding elements—birds in flight and abstract speckles—provide dynamic motion and balance, guiding the eye from the forehead spiderweb to the chest motifs. The spiderweb is deliberately placed to anchor the composition, inviting interpretations of fragility, fate, and rebirth. This concept leverages the latest AI-assisted design workflow to simulate shading, line weight, and texture variation before a traditional tattoo session, making it an ideal starting point for a custom tattoo design. The motifs carry meaning: the skulls symbolize mortality and remembrance, the queenly posture suggests empowerment, and the birds imply transition and freedom. The design is particularly well-suited for a large back, chest, or sleeve piece, but its strong silhouette and clear line work can be adapted to smaller canvases as a refined, fine line tattoo study. Whether commissioned for personal meaning or artistic statement, this blueprint concept demonstrates how modern ink can blend cultural symbolism with precise linework, producing a striking piece that remains readable at various scales. It remains a black and grey composition with rich texture, and if darker skin tones are used, the cover-up capability improves due to the dense grayscale shading. As an AI-generated tattoo project, it offers a showcase of how digital planning translates into body art, preserving details like the spiderweb, skull crown, and lace-like patterns in a cohesive narrative that can be adjusted to suit individual symbolism and placement.