A good spreader bar is among the simplest and most useful bondage implements:
Our well-spread bondage model is the justly-famous Chloë Des Lysses.
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He gave her a twenty minute head start to escape through the cornfields if she could. And she tried! But shackled like that, she couldn’t make very good speed, and her recapture was inevitable:
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It turns out that the 1912 Iris yearbook for the Ward Seminary in Nashville Tennessee had more than just the one creepy bondage illustration. Who knew that early-20th-century sororities were so open about the kinky content of their hazing and initiation rituals? Here’s a plate by Ward student artist Sue Weakly:
Our blindfolded heroine is being dragged in chains by Death himself across the Greek initials of the Beta Chi Omega sorority, of which the artist, listed here as “Susie Weakley”, was a member.
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She actually thought the gag meant that her mouth and throat would be spared. Until they took out the cork for some bondage blowjob action:
Artwork is by SneakAttack.
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The caption proclaims that the girl tied to the chair “lived through every Gestapo indignity. Then they sent a suave young SS man who specialized in the newest, most refined style of persuasion.” Huh. In what adventure-magazine fantasy universe is that wooden club “refined”?
From an illustration for the story P.O.W. Nightmare Of A Plucky French Girl in the January 1959 issue of Men: True Adventure.
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The classic wooden bondage horse is no picnic to sit on, by all accounts. But I do not imagine that lining the upper tip of the wedge with angle iron makes it better:
This horse — and the lovely model Kit who is tied on it here — are from the long-defunct Into The Attic website.
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