Megan Fox debuts SLEEVE TATTOO during racy appearance at Grammys party – months after revealing she was having arm ink ‘reworked’

Megan Fox expanded her tattoo collection in a big way by getting an entire sleeve on her left arm.

The bombshell, 37, debuted the new body art while attending a starry Grammys viewing party on Sunday in Los Angeles.

The tattoo features a large, detailed black and gray illustration of a phoenix in flight with blooming flowers drawn in red ink. It starts at her shoulder and ends just past her wrist.

Megan initially hid the tattoo from view upon her arrival by wearing a large black coat over her racy chainmail dress.

But later she let the coat slide off her shoulders as she posed on the red carpet.

The following day, the Transformers star gave fans a better look at her sleeve by sharing pH๏τos of herself sans coat on Instagram.

The racy snaps were taken by celebrity pH๏τographer Jacob Webster, who captured the tattoo from the side.

‘girl, interrupted,’ captioned the mother-of-three, a direct nod to the 1999 cult classic starring Winona Ryder and Angelina Jolie.

Megan’s latest tattoo is very recent as she had no sleeve when she attended a GQ party on November 16.

But days earlier, she revealed on The Drew Barrymore Show that she had plans to ‘rework’ a tattoo on her arm that she was not satisfied with.

‘I just got one that I don’t like that I have to rework and it’s my entire arm, so not a big deal,’ she told the host.

Megan is no stranger to tattoos as she has over 25 scattered across her body.

She has the Chinese character for ‘strength’ tattooed on the back of her neck, the phrase ‘We will all laugh at gilded ʙuттerflies’ on her right shoulder blade, a colorful crescent moon and star on her right ankle and a yin-yang symbol on her left wrist — which may be covered up by her new sleeve.

Megan has a lengthy quote from German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche on her right rib cage that reads: ‘And those who were seen dancing were thought to be insane by those who could not hear the music.’