Original post here. Image is part of a comics cover and contains the text “The Living Corpse. Lost World Below. Fangs of the Wolf Woman. Blood Curse.” Sourced via greatgrottu. Original text:
Strange Mysteries #1 (1951)
Original post here. Image is part of a comics cover and contains the text “The Living Corpse. Lost World Below. Fangs of the Wolf Woman. Blood Curse.” Sourced via greatgrottu. Original text:
Strange Mysteries #1 (1951)
Original post here. Sourced on tumblr to mono-chrome-lover via betoquintas. Original text:
“…cierra los ojitos…”
“…yo no tiemblo cuando te veo…”
“…muá…”
“…la bolitas te tiemblan antes de correrte…”
“…¿Cómo…?…”
“…así es que sé que voy a morir, alcanzo notarlo…”
…Sé que el demonio se sonrojó porque sentí que su esencia de repente se puso febril…
This image appears to be a grayscale of a page from a manga called Bestia. Here is something probably closer to the original image, found here.
Original post here. This appears to be a page from a manga entitled Gantz. Sourced on tumblr to antipahtico. Original text:
off his meds
Original post here. This appears to be an illustration from a comic called Songes: Coraline, written by Denis-Pierre Filippi and illustrated by Terry Dodson. Sourced on tumblr to slaveryfantasies.
Original post here. Image is a comic-book cover containing the text “Eerie. Tales of horror and suspense. No.1 The horror from the pit. The werewolf of Warsham manor. The King of the living dead. The subway horror.” Sourced on tumblr to vixensandmonsters via damsellover.
Original post here. This illustration appears to be a page from a comic by Rick Larson called The Haunted House of Lingerie. You can find a version of it here. Sourced on tumblr to olderoticart via erotiterrorist
Original post here. Image is a comics cover that contains the title “Hessa’s bruidsnacht.” Sourced to damsellover who added the text “Dutch comic.”
Original post here. A comment at http://www.pinterest.com/pin/331999803750996606/”>this Pinterest post identifies the artist as “Calberto” (consistent with the signature appearing in the image) and further identifies the image as being part ofa 1970s Portuguese horror comic called Zakarella. Sourced to madness-and-gods via drawn-out-masturbation.