My original tumblr post was here. This tube girl image was first posted on tumblr by Superdames! with the attribution to Weird Adventure #10 (1951), by Alex Kotzky.
Tag Archives: tube girls
Tumblr favorite #2423: Super find
My original tumblr post was here. This image was first posted on tumblr by http://kgthunder.tumblr.com/post/21292255739″>Badaxe and comes to us via dashtxt. It appears to be a crop from a cover illustration for a German sci-fi magazine called Perry, where it appears to illustrate a story called “Der Super-Mutant.”
Found, in a gallery of similar covers, here.
Tumblr favorite #2408: Tube guy interior decoration
My original tumblr post was here. This striking image was originally posted by adriensabores and went through of string of intermediary reposters, of which the most recent was devon-aoki who added the comment “keeping your boyfriends encapsulated in a large tube and using them for interior design purposes? loving that concept!” which tryinghuman responded with “Ya, it’s totally rad~ ” and an image:
Tumblr favorite #2395: A chorus line of tube girls
My original tumblr post was here. The Vault of Retro Sci-Fi first posted this image by Japanese illustrator Shusei Nagaoka (1936-2015) on tumblr. It comes to us via Reginald Juice.
Tumblr favorite #2390: Beware, evildoers! Captain Future will get you with his bagel gun.
My original tumblr post was here. This set of images of Captain Future was first posted by drechyng and comes to us via samwanda.
Tumbr favorite #2367: Blood effect
My original tumblr post was here. This is a cover of Oltretomba colore #15, “Effetto sangue.”
Tumblr favorite #2366: Alternate Lifeforce
MY original tumblr post was here. This promotional poster for the 1985 movie Lifeforce was originally posted on tumblr by RIOT AT THE MOVIES and comes to us via the-bronx-remembers.
Tumblr favorite #2326: Lucky aliens
My original tumblr post was here. This image was originally posted by thevaultofretroscifi with the identifying text “Aliens, Bubbles and Babes ~ Greg Hildebrandt.” Greg Hildegbrandt, together with his brother Tim, maintains a website here. This image comes to us via geekterror.
Tumblr favorite #2322: If they were more genre-savvy, they would have expected this
My original tumblr post was here. This comics cover was first published by Comic Book Covers, which it is identified as Tales of the Unexpected #29 (September 1958), cover by Howard Purcell. The cover apparently promotes a story called “The Sleeping Beauty of Space.” It comes to us via doppelgaenger18.
Tumblr favorite #2249: Gotta get up and go to work
My original tumblr post was here. This image is Gotta Get Up and Go to Work by Bradley W. Schenck, who comments thus on his own work:
Retropolis offers a wide variety of accommodations to the tourist or traveler: from five star suites in the floating Galacticon hotel, through the more utilitarian, blastproof rooms made available to the conventioneers of The Society of Demented Research Technicians – and finally, to these modern and streamlined sleeping tubes at hotels like downtown’s “Tubular Belles”.
Sleek and affordable, these tubes bathe the sleeper in a sonic shower that cleans both sleeper and clothing. Visitors awake refreshed and ready for a new tomorrow – helped along by the hot, strong coffee that tops off the hotel’s complimentary breakfast.
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This all happened because of a series of blog posts at the Posthuman Blues blog – [link] … there, for example.
Though I’d never spent a lot of time thinking about Women In Tubes – and really, I haven’t, at least not since the seventies – once I did think about them, I realized that they’re all over the covers of pulp science fiction magazines from the Golden Age of, well, pulp science fiction magazines.
And I started to feel like less of a man because I’d never put women in tubes into my own pictures. I mean, obviously, it’s fundamental, right?
But it’s not enough to just stick a women in a tube. Not EVEN in the seventies. What the heck are they doing in there? How did they get into a freaking tube, in the first place? It can’t be like that ship in a bottle thing: that’s disgusting. How do they get out? And, as always, who stands to benefit from all these women in tubes?
So I’ve tried to answer these questions, and in the act I also made the tubes coeducational. Because that’s how I roll.
the title’s from a song of 1933, by Olive Levine & Beany Miller. Because that’s ALSO how I roll.
In addition to his DeviantArt site, Bradley W. Schenck maintains an interactive story site, Thrilling Tales of the Downright Unusual.