Original post here.
Sourced to Broken hearted over the moon via reginaldjuice.
Another longtime Erotic Mad Science contributor, Brazilian artist Lucy Fidelis, recreates an old movie magazine cover in her distinctively warm, curvy style.
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The original cover is Saucy Movie Tales (March 1936), and the original art is by Norman Saunders. I first blogged it in a post “Tropical Take” at Hedonix.
Lucy Fidelis has a DeviantArt site here and a professional site here.
Some more sinister mad science pulp recreated by José Augusto Cano.
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The cover of a rare pulp magazine called Gangland Detective (November 1939). According to this rare book site, the issue contains a story called “Mistress of the White-Slave King.” Some additional provenance can be found in the post “Oh, great. Now Satan has a death ray…” at Hedonix.
José Augusto Cano has a DeviantArt site here and a professional site here.
An illustration by Erotic Mad Science newcomer DFMO, who has a sharp eye for equipment detail.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
I originally blogged this image in a post “Mad Doctor Peril” at Hedonix. It’s a painting by the ubiquitous Norman Saunders, and appeared as the cover of New Mystery Adventures (1935).
Found here.
DMFO has a DeviantArt site here.
Original post here.
Original text:
amazing stories october by pelz on Flickr.
cover art by Robert Gibson Jones
Another illustration by Lon Ryden.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Some of the provenance can be found in the post “Octopus Man” 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.
Another one by Frans Mensink, showing an actress who really needs to fire her agent.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
I originally blogged this in a post “Lights, Camera, Peril” at Infernal Wonders, but that post lacked much in the way of provenance. A little subsequence Internet research shows that the source of the illustration is the April 1936 cover of Saucy Movie Tales by the prolific American pulp artist Norman Saunders (1907-1989). This appears to be the unredacted cover:
Found in this gallery at American Art Archives. There is a dedicated Norman Saunders site here.
Frans Mensink has a DeviantArt site here and a professional site here.