How can something be a brain and at the same time be formless? Oh, well. Probably better not to think to hard. Original post here.
Sourced to Steve Niles Tumblr.
How can something be a brain and at the same time be formless? Oh, well. Probably better not to think to hard. Original post here.
Sourced to Steve Niles Tumblr.
A second entry from CG artist KristinF, following a theme for today.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
The cover of Spicy Adventure Stories (July 1935). The artist for the cover, as can be seen in a signature in the lower-left, was H.J. Ward (1909-1945). He has a modest Pulp Artists catalog here. I blogged this image originally in a post “Slave Girl and Racial Stereotype” at Infernal Wonders.
KristinF has a DeviantArt site here and an additional, possibly more explicit site here.
TheLadyJ recreates a fantasy cover.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Provenance for the image can be found in my original blogging of it in the post “The Curse of a Thousand Kisses at Infernal Wonders.
TheLadyJ has a DeviantArt page here.
An entry from a long-contributing CG artist KristinF.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
I don’t exactly know the provenance of the illustration, but it appears to be part of a large series of BDSM-related novels written under the name “Nathan Silvers” available here, so if you want to add Daisy-Chain Cheerleaders or Hung Strung Houseguest to your library along with Lash the Librarian, don’t let me stop you. I blogged this image originally in a post “Lash the Librarian!” at Infernal Wonders.
KristinF has a DeviantArt site here and an additional, possibly more explicit site here.
Lon Ryden asks himself who will prosper after the apocalypse, and the answer appears to be they that have tanks with giant mechanical grabber things.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
The cover of Thrilling Wonder Stories (Spring 1946), painted by Earle Bergey (1901-1952). This artist has an entry at The Field Guide to American Pulp artists here, a page at the American Art Archives here, and there is an official site (listed as “coming soon”) here. A little additional provenance on the image can be found in the post “Attack of the gown-shredding robot” at Infernal Wonders.
Lon Ryden is the illustrator of, among many other things, the Tales of Gnosis College and We Must Boost the Signal. He has a DeviantArt site here and a professional site here.