Sort of a waste- a tiny, anorexic-looking girl in that super-sticky mud. With no leg muscles, she could barely move!
Better one of the ladies on the forum here, with a muscular body toned by many hours struggling in deep mud.
latex catsuit girl in sticky mud
- nachtjaeger
- Posts: 2843
- Joined: Wed Apr 15, 2009 11:45 am
- Location: upstate NY USA
- Contact:
Re: latex catsuit girl in sticky mud
This space for rent- advertise your product or service here!
- PM2K
- Always Remembered
- Posts: 10386
- Joined: Wed Apr 15, 2009 6:14 pm
- Location: Eastern Ontario
Re: latex catsuit girl in sticky mud
nachtjaeger wrote:Sort of a waste- a tiny, anorexic-looking girl in that super-sticky mud. With no leg muscles, she could barely move!
Better one of the ladies on the forum here, with a muscular body toned by many hours struggling in deep mud.
I'm presuming wearing a similar catsuit....
-
- Posts: 152
- Joined: Sun May 23, 2010 12:24 am
Re: latex catsuit girl in sticky mud
I talked a bit with one of the producers about the thickness of the mud. I tried to suggest he use a dryer mix of clay, so things would be stickier, but he said if the clay was too thick, you couldn't sink. My next suggestion (and I personally thought this sounded like a *LOT* of fun!) was to have his normal thin clay pit set-up, but to dump a lot of dry clay on top of it, so he would have a layer of thick, sticky clay atop a layer of thin. The part of this catsuit video that I found so interesting was the fly-paper way she was getting stuck in the surface. Having that atop a clay pit would (I think) allow what looked to be dusty dry ground that would liquefy into a very sticky surface, stopping a model in her tracks, but allowing her to go down without much trouble.
Unfortunately, this wouldn't be something you could "reset" easily. Things would need to go well on the first take, and there wouldn't even be a handy way to rehearse it. Heck, it would take rather a lot of experimentation to find the right amount of clay to get this to work at all.
Unfortunately, this wouldn't be something you could "reset" easily. Things would need to go well on the first take, and there wouldn't even be a handy way to rehearse it. Heck, it would take rather a lot of experimentation to find the right amount of clay to get this to work at all.
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests