Tumblr favorite #1831: Sewing her own seams

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Original post here. This image was researched by Bacchus at ErosBlog as part of the “Γ commission.” The research was originally published at Hedonix as “Γ 063 – Sewing Your Own Seams.” Here is what Bacchus found.

Although this Bride of Frankenstein themed artwork is sometimes to be found on Pinterest and elsewhere attributed to cartoonist Dan DeCarlo, that attribution appears incorrect. Cheesecake cartoonist and self-described pencil-jockey Rock Baker posted it to his blog under the title Preymates as part of a themed set of six cartoons with this explanation:

The idea was to do a series of Dan DeCarlo style horror-themed pinup cartoons. Jeff Austin and I have thus far completed these examples.

For interest, one of the other cartoons in the series features a sexy hooded executioner fielding pleas from four different chained men competing to be the next customer for her beheading ax.

Tumblr favorite #1830: Fantasy armor works!

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This image was researched by Bacchus at ErosBlog as part of the “Γ commission.” The research was originally published at Hedonix as “Γ 062 – Fantasy Armor Really Works!.” Here is what Bacchus found.

Original post here. This image was uploaded to Imgur during the last week of July, 2014, and has subsequently exploded across all social media. Although there are nearly 500 results for it in Google Image Search alone, virtually all of these results appear to post-date the Imgur posting. No image credit was provided on Imgur by RedShotRonin, the uploader; and a look at his posting history does not suggest that he’s in the habit of posting his own work or claiming what he posts as such. As one commenter points out in the Imgur thread, it’s an update of a very old visual joke about fantasy armor for women that originally appeared in Dragon magazine for tabletop Dungeons and Dragons players. No older posting of this image or proper artist credit could be identified.

Tumblr favorite #1829: Alita’s self-pleasure

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Original post here. This image was researched by Bacchus at ErosBlog as part of the “Γ commission.” The research was originally published at Hedonix as “Γ 061 – Alita’s Pleasure.” Here is what Bacchus found.

This artwork is by the artist Hazyl, who has titled it (perhaps working with less-than-perfect English) Tuned Alita secret time. The artist writes:

Here is a special situation for Alita, relatively chaste character putting in a situation of sexual experiment. A first experience which seems to me possible with its body of ” tuned “. In your appreciation;)

Voici une mise en scène de gally, personnage relativement chaste auquel je me suis exercé à mettre dans une situation d’expérimentation sexuelle. Une première expérience qui me semble possible avec son corps de “tuned”. À votre appréciation 😉

From the comments on the artwork it becomes clear that the Alita depicted in the artwork is the titular cyborg Alita character from the Japanese manga series Battle Angel Alita. Her fan art depictions are numerous and varied; see, e.g., these 64 examples at Rule 34.

Tumblr favorite #1828: Candyspace

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Original post here. This image was researched by Bacchus at ErosBlog as part of the “Γ commission.” The research was originally published at Hedonix as “Γ 060 – Candyspace.” Here is what Bacchus found.

This image sources on Tumblr back to the artist’s blog, where it is titled “Candyspace” by artist Zoetica Ebb, and tagged “illustration” and “my work”. There’s a “taken with Instagram” caption which suggests it may be a filtered photograph of the author’s art, in support of which notion is the fact that a similar illustration appears as part of the “spacefriends sticker set” that is available for sale in the unlinkable shop on the artist’s web page. (Navigate Shop⇒Stickers⇒Spacefriends Stickers Set.)

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Tumblr favorite #1827: Haunted laboratory

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Original post here. This image was researched by Bacchus at ErosBlog as part of the “Γ commission.” The research was originally published at Hedonix as “Γ 059 – Haunted Laboratory.” Here is what Bacchus found.

This artwork is cropped and cleaned cover art from the cover of the horror comic This Magazine is Haunted Vol. 2 #7 (1951). That link suggests that the identity of the cover artist is unknown to the comics-collecting world. Here’s the original cover:

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A complete scan of the 10-page magazine may be found here.

Tumblr favorite #1826: Self service

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Original post here. This image was researched by Bacchus at ErosBlog as part of the “Γ commission.” The research was originally published at Hedonix as “Γ 058 – User Serviceable.” Here is what Bacchus found.

This artwork is identified at the Fembot wiki as work by the artist Sukabu. Danbooru has an artist info page for Sukabu including Pixiv, Tumblr, and Twitter links. Sukabu appears to be a prolific artist with a fondness for self-tinkering android girls. The Awesome Robo site says:

Sukabu isn’t shy about showing off his affinity for cyberpunk, having crafted an entire universe ins his mind comprised of more stylized Ghost In The Shell style cyborg heroines, in various stages of enhancement, tinkering about with various black market technologies to achieve their true potential. Despite the seemingly simplistic, cookie cutter anime style on the surface, replete with plenty of school girls and vocaloids, on a closer glance his work also exemplifies a deep love of industrial design and scifi that offer some rather interesting visual contrast between simple and detailed shapes. This mix of themes is just plain fun to look at, offering us a look into a strange futuristic world full of augmentations and cybernetic clutter.

Just by way of example, here’s a similar image from the Sukabu images at Danbooru:

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Tumblr favorite #1825: She looks healthy enough

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Original post here. This image was researched by Bacchus at ErosBlog as part of the “Γ commission.” The research was originally published at Hedonix as “Γ 057 – She Looks Healthy Enough.” Here is what Bacchus found.

This sexy pinup artwork featuring a woman dressed as a schoolgirl getting checked with a stethoscope by a leering mad-scientist doctor is initialed with a stylized “MC” signature lower right. That is consistent with the credit found here to artist Massimo Carnevale. The artwork graced the cover of Italian fumetti magazine Skorpio #38 (25-9-2003):

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Artist Massimo Carnevale appears to have an active art blog on Blogspot; it is here.