Kwadron Cartridge Needles Explained: Which Configuration Actually Fits Your Work

Pulling up Kwadron's cartridge list for the first time is its own kind of puzzle. Round liners, round shaders, magnums, curved magnums, hybrids — and that's before you get to the four-digit codes stamped on every box.
All of them put ink into skin. What changes from one configuration to the next is how the needle sits, how it moves, and what kind of work it's actually built for. If your lines are coming out shaky, your shading looks patchy, or your fills take three passes when they should take one, there's a good chance the problem isn't your hand — it's the wrong cartridge for what you're trying to do.
Here's how Kwadron's tattoo needle cartridges break down, and how to match a configuration to your style. Browse all Kwadron cartridges at Maple Tattoo Supply if you already know what you're after, or keep reading to figure it out.
Why Artists Keep Reaching for Kwadron
Before the configurations, it's worth knowing what you're actually paying for — because the brand's reputation comes down to three things you feel in the first ten minutes of a session.
The needle bar sits tight. Inside a Kwadron cartridge, the bar is built to minimize side-to-side play — the wobble that quietly turns a clean line into a fuzzy one. You notice it most on the small round liners, the 3RL and 5RL, where even a fraction of drift shows up in the final line. For fine line, script, and geometric work, that stability is most of the reason artists pay for the brand.
The membrane keeps your gear clean. Every Kwadron cartridge has a membrane inside that stops ink, blood, and plasma from creeping back up into the grip and machine. Less cross-contamination risk, and your setup stays cleaner from one client to the next.
The needles are sharp — which cuts both ways. Sharp means crisp outlines, pigment that drops exactly where you put it, and fewer passes to saturate. It also means less forgiveness. If you're coming off a softer cartridge, Kwadron can feel aggressive, and loose depth or hand speed will turn into blowouts faster than you're used to.
Worth keeping in mind: don't switch to Kwadron in the middle of a piece you care about. Break them in on practice skin or a simpler session first — get a feel for how little pressure they actually need, then bring them into your detail work.
How to Read the Code
Every box has something like 0803RL on it. Once you can read it, the whole catalogue stops looking like a wall of numbers:
- First two digits = needle diameter. 08 = 0.25mm (bugpin), 10 = 0.30mm (standard), 12 = 0.35mm
- Next two digits = needle count. 03 = 3 needles, 09 = 9 needles
- Letters = configuration. RL, RS, M1, CM, and so on
So 0803RL is a 0.25mm, 3-needle round liner — about as fine and precise as lining gets. 1209CM is a 0.35mm, 9-needle curved magnum for smooth blending across bigger areas. Same logic every time.

Round Liners (RL) — Lines, and Nothing But Lines
The needles are grouped tight in a circle, so all the energy goes into one clean point of contact. This is the configuration for script, fine line, geometric work, and traditional outlines — anywhere a wandering or thick line ruins the whole design.
Smaller groupings (3RL, 5RL) give you the most control for delicate work. Larger ones (7RL, 9RL) lay down a bolder, single-pass outline for traditional and bold styles.
Worth keeping in mind: small round liners are the most technique-sensitive configuration in the catalogue. A little too much speed or depth and the line blows out. But when your hand is dialled in, the result is unmistakable.
Best for: Fine line, script, geometric, traditional outlines, single-needle-level detail
Popular configs: 0803RL · 0805RL · 1007RL · 1209RL
Round Shaders (RS) — Soft Tone, Built Up Slowly
Round shaders take the same circular grouping as a liner but spread it slightly looser, so instead of a hard line you get a soft, controllable dot of ink. That makes them the go-to for whip shading, pepper shading, and small fills where you need to build tone gradually.
Black-and-grey realism artists lean on these for smooth tonal gradients — laying tone down slowly rather than packing it flat. If your shading is looking blotchy with a magnum, an RS gives you far more control over where the tone lands.
Best for: Whip shading, pepper shading, soft gradients, small fills, black-and-grey realism

Magnum (M1) — Coverage and Saturation
Two rows of needles means each pass covers far more ground than a round configuration, and it does it with less trauma than dragging a tight grouping back and forth. For color packing, solid black fills, and large coverage areas, the magnum is what gets it done fast and evenly.
Straight magnums (M1) are efficient and predictable — exactly what you want when you're saturating a large field. Just know that on blending, they leave a harder edge than a curved magnum will.
Best for: Color packing, solid black fills, large coverage, bold traditional
Curved Magnum (CM) — The Blender Everyone Reaches For
The needles arc slightly at the tip, so the outer needles touch the skin a little lighter than the center ones. That curve does the work: smoother blends, softer transitions, and far less edge trauma than a straight magnum. It's the most-used configuration in modern tattooing, and for good reason.
If you're getting hard, visible edges where one tone meets another on an M1, switching to a CM often fixes it without changing anything else about your technique.
Best for: Blending, soft transitions, color realism, black-and-grey gradients, anywhere you want the edge to disappear
Hybrid Configurations — Precision That Still Flows
Kwadron's hybrids sit between a traditional liner and a higher-flow configuration. You get the sharp definition of a tight grouping, but the ink moves more freely — you don't have to fight the cartridge to get saturation.
Artists doing blackwork, ornamental pieces, and dense detailed linework tend to gravitate here. It's the balance between crisp definition and ink flow that makes them worth keeping alongside your standard liners.
Best for: Blackwork, ornamental, dense linework, high-efficiency outlining

The Kwadron PMU Line — A Separate Animal
PMU work isn't tattooing on the same skin, and Kwadron's PMU cartridges are built for it. Made by Kwadron PMU (the Polish side of the operation), these are among the most widely used premium permanent makeup cartridges out there — popular for brows, lip blush, eyeliner, scalp micropigmentation (SMP), and medical pigmentation.
Standard PMU line — the premium baseline. Powder brows, lip blush, eyeliner, hairstrokes, SMP. Where most artists start.
Kwadron PMU Optima Professional — the flagship range, built specifically for facial skin with finer tolerances than tattoo-derived cartridges. Available across liners, shaders, magnums, and PMU-specific configurations.
Optima Gold — the premium step up, with even tighter manufacturing tolerances. The pick for high-volume PMU artists and advanced machine users who need maximum consistency shot after shot.
If you're doing facial work, don't reach for a tattoo cartridge to save a few dollars — the PMU line exists because facial skin demands it.
Configuration Quick Reference
| Configuration | Best For | What It Does | Watch Out For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Round Liner (RL) | Fine line, script, geometric, outlines | Tight grouping, one clean point of contact | Most technique-sensitive in the catalogue |
| Round Shader (RS) | Whip/pepper shading, B&G realism | Soft dot of ink, tone built up slowly | Slower than a magnum on big areas |
| Magnum (M1) | Color packing, black fills, coverage | Two rows, fast saturation, even coverage | Harder edges than a curved magnum |
| Curved Magnum (CM) | Blending, transitions, realism | Curved tip softens the outer needles | Less aggressive saturation than M1 |
| Hybrid | Blackwork, ornamental, dense linework | Liner precision with more ink flow | Overkill for simple fine line |
Which Configuration Should You Actually Use?
Fine line, script, or geometric? Small round liners — 0803RL, 0805RL. Maximum control, minimum line.
Black-and-grey realism shading? Round shaders for whip and pepper work where you build tone slowly; curved magnums when you want smooth, edge-free gradients across a larger area. Most realism artists keep both.
Color packing or bold traditional fills? Magnums for fast, even saturation. Step up to a curved magnum if you're blending color rather than just packing it.
Blackwork or ornamental? Hybrids — sharp definition without fighting to saturate the line.
New to Kwadron and getting blowouts? It's almost never the cartridge. Sharp needles need less depth and a steadier hand speed than softer ones — ease off, slow down, and let the needle do the work. Break them in on a simpler session before you bring them into detail work.
Doing PMU? Stay in the PMU line, and move up to Optima or Optima Gold when facial precision and consistency matter more than cost per box.
The short version: most working artists end up with a small RL, an RS, a CM, and a magnum in rotation — that covers lining, shading, blending, and fills without thinking about it. When in doubt, that's the spread to stock.
Browse all Kwadron tattoo cartridges at Maple Tattoo Supply — in store at our North York and Downtown Toronto locations, or order online with fast shipping across Canada. Tag us in the work you make with them.
FAQs



