My original tumblr post was here. This illustration is Safe in Storage by alucards-spirit.
Tag Archives: tube girls
Tumblr favorite #1984: Tales of Extraterrestrial Terror
My original tumblr post was here. This image contains the text “Tales of Extraterrestrial Terror: Stories of evil aliens behaving just like depraved human beings.” It is Pulp 2: Tales of Extraterrestrial Terror by archeotron.
Tumblr favorite #1965: Into the tube with you!
My original tumblr post was here. This image was first posted on tumblr by damsellover, who includes the date “March 1962.” This pulp cover contains the text “Shock Mystery Tales. Satan’s Mistress, by Craighton Lamont. Soft Hands of Madness, by Bill Ryder. Horror Island, by Anthony Stuart.” I have been unable to determine the artist, but did find a slightly larger version of the cover image at pulpcovers.com.
Tumblr favorite #1959: Ryan Heshka II
Tumblr favorite #1887: Tube twins
My original tumblr post was here. This image was researched by Bacchus at ErosBlog as part of the “Δ commission.” The research was originally published at Hedonix as “Δ 057 – Tube Twins.” Here is what Bacchus found.
This image is a cutout detail (heavily blown up) from the cover of a modern edition of Twin Of The Amazon, a 1948 pulp novel from the 27-volume Golden Amazon series, by author John Russell Fearn:
According to the International Science Fiction Database, the full cover art shown directly above is by artist Ron Turner and was scanned from a 1998 re-release edition of the book. Turner’s career credits begin in 1950 and continued through his death in 1998, so it is clear that this cover could not have appeared on the original 1948 edition of the book. However, both Wikipedia and the ISFDB indicate there was also a 1954 edition. The Wikipedia entry for Ron Turner, though, suggests he did not begin drawing cover art for Gryphon Books until the 1990s, leading to the conclusion that this artwork is quite modern. Indeed, the cover of one 1954 edition seen here is far less lurid:
Tumblr favorite #1877: Project 513
My original tumblr post was here. This image was researched by Bacchus at ErosBlog as part of the “Δ commission.” The research was originally published at Hedonix as “Δ 046 – Project 513 Going Badly.” Here is what Bacchus found.
Visible in this image are the words “Project 513” and the url “huntang.artstation.com”. That URL leads to the web page for the artist Angelina Stroganova from Moscow, Russia. This image is visible there along with a grayscale version of the same art. This artist also has a presence on Deviant Art where the same artwork appears.
Although there are several references to Project 513 in connection with other artworks on this artist’s pages, I was unable to find any information in English on the significance of the Project 513 name or what it represents.
Tumblr favorite #1855: Seven tube girls
Original post here. This image was researched by Bacchus at ErosBlog as part of the “Δ commission.” The research was originally published at Hedonix as Here is what Bacchus found.
This artwork is cropped from a screenshot from the 1992 Japanese computer role-playing game Dragon Pink: The Zero Castle which ran on the PC-98 platform:
The game was based on Dragon Pink, a 1990 erotic manga by Itoyoko that was later made into a three-part erotic anime series. A central character (not shown) was a cat-girl slave named Pink.
Tumblr favorite #1809: Tube girl princesses
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 039 – Gagged Princesses.” Hers is what Bacchus found.
This artwork is called dpt5 by artist erikson1 on DeviantArt. The gagged women are all princesses from various popular movies for children.
The artwork is a “gagged variant” of a work by the same artist called A Princess Tale continues:
There’s a suggestion that a blindfolded variant also exists, but I was unable to locate it in the artist’s galleries.
Yet another tube girl
Were I sane, I might weary of the theme. But I ain’t, so I don’t.
She appears to be conscious of her fate, and not particularly pleased about it. It’s the work of Marcos “Hogwarts Prefect” Pashias, and found here, along with much of his other interesting art. [Faustus update, May 13, 2018: The original link to the art appears to be broken, but at least one version of Pashias’s page is preserved in the Internet Archive.]