Throb

THROBBS said:
THANKS!
'cept I had not even posted my Satyr drawings...a few Minotaur ones, yes.
Technicality... but I will post a few Satyrs that I have. (a few moments, please.)

Ooops, my bad. :rolleyes: I must get my mythological creatures right. :eek:
 
THROBBS said:
Not a problem! I am glad, because I have a great interest in mythological beings especially exploring them in an erotic way.

You reminded me about some I'd filed. THANK YOU!

You're most welcome. These drawings are very hot. I love the one by the tree stump. I've started to write down the fantasy. It's somewhat of a time-travel abduction (but in the "Oh' I've been kidnapped but Oh how I'm having fun sense") fantasy. It's always nice to find mutual inspiration isn't it?
 
THROBBS said:
here's a Satyr AND a Dryad. This is a sketch for my own bookplate... I have quite a few erotic books. I will make an etching plate and print my own.. when I have some free time....snort...heehehheee... "free time".... HahHAHahHAHAHHAHAHAHHAAA!

http://img184.imagevenue.com/loc161/th_79996_exLIBRIS.eroticus_123_161lo.jpg

*giggles* Isn't that reminiscent of a line in an old film or book...."Why don't you come in sweetheart? I'd like to show you my etchings." ;) Lovely drawing BTW.
 
THROBBS said:
'zactly.

'cept nobody ever does (come in to see them) :( *whaa! whaa! whaaa! :D

From:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Etching
Trivia

The phrase "Want to come up and see my etchings?" is a romantic cliché in which a man entices a woman to come back to his place with an offer to look at something artistic. Some accounts say the expression arose from the understanding, in the New York City of his day, that many of Stanford White's notorious affairs involved such invitations to a townhouse that he rented and had furnished with etchings of nudes. (White died in 1906 -- in a murder over a lover.) The idea was used in 1929 in Alfred Hitchcock's first sound film, Blackmail, where the invitation came from the creator of the etchings his intended sex partner was to see.

Thanks for the history lesson (seriously). I thought the phrase came about during that era but I wasn't sure where it was from. Very interesting; especially the film trivia.
 
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