Determine your desired anagram. Either write the letters of the word or phrase you wish to scramble into an anagram on a piece of paper and use the process of simple trial and error to generate an anagram on your own, or plug the word or phrase into one of many online anagram generators on the Internet.
Draw or sketch the letters of your anagram on a blank piece of white paper using a regular pencil. Do not worry about shading or coloring at this point, just a broad outline of the letters and words is necessary. Make alterations and corrections to the drawing with an eraser and do not move on to step 3 until every line of your anagram is exactly how you want it.
Trace over the pencil lines of your drawing with a thin black marker. You cannot make corrections once you've outlined the area in marker, so if you find a mistake, you may have to start over. Again, do not worry about shading or coloring at this point.
Erase away the pencil lines once you've outline the entire image in black marker and flip the paper.
Place the flipped paper over a lighting desk or under a bright lamp so the lines show through to the other side and begin tracing the image with your black marker. This reverse image you are creating will be the one you use to make the stencil. All stencils have to be the mirror image of the actual tattoo in order for it to lay frontwards when it is applied. Some people use carbon paper to achieve a reverse image, some just flip and trace, it doesn't matter what you do, so long as you create a reverse image of your design.
Tape a piece of stencil paper over the reverse image so the paper won't slide apart when tracing.
Trace the reverse image onto the stencil paper with a tattoo stencil pencil. These lines can be difficult to erase, so if you make a mistake, start over on a fresh piece.
Peel the tape away and separate the two pages.
Give the stencil to your artist and allow him to apply it to your skin.