A man has tattooed his name across his girlfriend's face less than 24 hours after they first met.
The woman- known only as Lesya - allowed Rouslan Toumaniantz to sign 'Ruslan' over her face in giant Gothic script on the day they met.
Mr Toumaniantz's handiwork hit the headlines in 2009 after he tattooed 56 stars across an 18-year-old's face who then lied and accused him of inking her when she was asleep.
But luckily his new girlfriend Lesya is pleased with the result, saying: 'It's a symbol of our eternal devotion. I'd like him to tattoo every inch of my body.
Controversial: Ruslan Toumaniantz has caused a write fuss again - after signing his name across his girlfriend's face less than 24 hours after he met her
Branded: The woman- known only as Lesya - allowed him to sign 'Ruslan' over her face in giant Gothic script on the day they met. The pair - who'd met online in Moscow, Russia - now say they plan to get married
The pair who met online in Moscow, Russia now plan to get married.
Mr Toumaniantz fled Belgium after the scandal caused by Kimberley Vlaeminckin in 2009.
She lied to her family and reporters and claimed that she had asked Mr Toumaniantz for just three stars near her eye.
As her regret sank in, she claimed he kept adding more and more after she fell asleep at the Tattoo Box in Coutrai, Belgium.
Pleased: 'It's a symbol of our eternal devotion. I'd like him to tattoo every inch of my body,' she said
Before: Lesya before she had the tattoo across her face
She promised to sue the tattooist for the cost of removal, claiming a language barrier meant the Flemish speaker had misunderstood when she gave instructions in French and English.
Miss Vlaeminck said she avoided going out in public because the tattoos made her feel like a 'freak'.
But a week later she confessed to a Dutch TV station that she had been awake throughout and had indeed asked for the full 56 marks.
She said she lied because she was afraid of how her father would react.
Freshly inked: Kimberley Vlaeminck at the age of 18 in 2009, shortly after she asked tattooist Rouslan Toumaniantz to cover her face in black stars
Even still, Mr Toumaniantz - whose own face is covered in tattoos and piercings - offered to pay half the cost of laser removal, saying he did not want to leave a customer unsatisfied.
He later retracted this offer, leaving Miss Vlaeminck to cover the cost alone.
Though laser treatment has been shown to be a effective way of removing ink, even the most advanced technology would leave white marks across her face.