Date: Tue 03/24/2026
[18+] Collection of latex fetish photography and literature
Since I'm a pervert, I've been reading a few articles exploring my interest in fetishism and sexual identity by reading old SM magazines and consuming various kink fiction. These are 70s 80s 90s sources that includes lesbian (I prefer this) and heterosexual D/S dynamics. This list of media isn't a recommendation by any means, more so to document my thoughts on pieces that I've read.
A collection of short heterosexual erotic stories. It wasn't gay and FAR from woke, which is expected of a book compiled in the 1940s. The main author, however, is quite interesting. Anais Nin (1903-1977) was a French-born American diarist, essayist, novelist, and writer of short stories and erotica. Her journals detailed many of her private thoughts and description of her numerous affairs with men and women. Nin is haied by many critics as one of the finest writers of female erotica (that is erotica catered to women); and also one of the first women known to explore fully the realm of erotic writing. She was influenced by the feminist movement in the 60s, but wasn't an activist herself.
About White Stains itself, I did some research by looking over the reviews and found readers appalled by the explicit and rapey nature of the writings; and that it didn't resemble Anais's style at all. I've only gone past the first two short stories which only had voyerism and polygamy, which I enjoyed. One user advised to read Henry and June instead. But I'd rather read lesbian erotica, and in the end, my reading of the book came to a full stop.
A delightful BDSM kink magazine published in May 2000. There are many interesting articles, photographs, fetish product advertisements, and so on. I looked into some of the recommended kink media to understand the scene back then, including Ivory Manor 3: Tropical Submission (A porn series), Salo: The 120 days of Sodom (A movie about exposing sexual deviancy of the elites), and the earlier mentioned White Stains. My thoughts? It's really as woke as the 2000s levels of woke, and I'm better off reading modern works. I enjoyed Tropical Submission though, the opening scene was hot.
Since I emphasize on the importance of "wokeness" so much, there was a progressive article that I liked in the magazine. By the standards at the time, at least. In Code Breakers by Julia Collings on page 50, she makes a critique of the SM scene at the time in the fight for fetishist rights.
This archive is a blessing. I was thinking about buy physical books until I came upon the site. I want to use the photos as drawing material.