Original post here. Sourced via princessandthewolf. Original text:
Source: My Pet Tentacle Monster
Original post here. Sourced via princessandthewolf. Original text:
Source: My Pet Tentacle Monster
Original post here. Sourced via greatgrottu. Original text:
vincent di fate – above and below by Myriac Acia on Flickr.
Original post here. Sourced to photodom.com. Original text was my comment “An unusually human-looking Santa Muerte, attributed to photographer Blackdante.”
Original post here. Sourced via nudityandnerdery. Original text:
So, I made a controller/striker spider seductress character for d&d; focusing on crowd control, dragging enemies away, manipulating them, making broods, and poisoning people. So yeah, that next level frenching tongue of doom.
Art by Risto

Original post here. Various posts in the tumblr ecosystem identify the artist by the name Koutarou Ookoshi. Sourced to bloodymaiden via goddess-of-smut.

Original post here. Sourced via erotiterrorist. Original text:

Original post here. Work by Budd Root. Sourced on tumblr to guiltiestguiltypleasures via womenfuckingmonsters.

Original post here. This long forum post identifies the artist as “Michael Hutter” and contains other examples by the same artist.
Image is a comics panel containing the dialog balloons “(1) Ici Kathy Shmurtz, en direct…je viens d’être assaillié par un démon qui apprête à me violer… (2) Shlurp! (3) Heu…non, qui me sod…”
Image is a comics panel containing the dialog balloon “On peut goûter?”
Original post here. This page at BDtheque might be the source of the images, and identifies them as the work of French comics scenarist François Marcela-Froideval (b. 1958). Sourced on tumblr to desiderisensuali via singoshibari.
Image contains the text “Weird Tales: The Unique Magazine. Feb. 1932. 25 cents. The Devil’s Bride by Seabury Quinn. Gaston Leroux, Maurice Level, Robert E. Howard, Edmond Hamilton, Wallace G. West, Donald Wandrei, Alexandre Dumas.”
Image contains the text “Weird Tales. The Blue Woman: a weird mystery story by John Scott Douglas. Paul Ernst, Arlton Eadie, Robert Bloch, Clark Ashton Smith. Another Doctor Satan story in this issue.”
Original post here. Sourced via greatgrottu. Original text:
February 1932
September 1935
pulp adventure/horror stories