Serie de cómics eróticos: Free Sex People

freesexpeople-capitulo1_portada.jpg


Nos escriben para anunciarnos el lanzamiento de una nueva serie de cómics eróticos. Esta es la nota de prensa:

Por ahora hemos publicado el primer capítulo Flamenco y sushi. No se trata de otro cómic porno o erótico de los que ya existen, Free Sex People intenta ir algo más allá.

Free Sex People es un proyecto auto gestionado por sus propios autores. Dani Plana es el guionista e ilustrador y Mara Wish la guionista. La serie completa tiene licencia Creative Commons by-nc-sa 3.0 y sera accesible gratuitamente en formato html, desde nuestra página web www.FreeSexPeople.com.

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2 Responses to “Serie de cómics eróticos: Free Sex People”

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  1. Free Sex People « MyFukin’WebLog says:

    [...] http://www.entrecomics.com/?p=14293 http://labuenanoticia.com/free-sex-people http://labuenagente.com/cosas [...]

  2. Daniel says:

    http://www.arterupestre-c.com

    As we can see through different images, they had sexual intercourse with animals, homosexual relations and more than two people at the same time.

    http://www.arterupestre-c.com/1000.htm

    Venus – Venuses

    http://www.arterupestre-c.com/1000ven.htm

    There is o ne sculpture that is emblematic, found in 1908, after lots of research and different epochs being affirmed as the real o nes about this sculpture, now they believe it was done around 24,000-22,000 BC.

    It shows a woman with a large stomach that overhangs but does not hide her pubic area. A roll of fat extends around her middle, joining with large but rather flat buttocks, there’s no face and seems that at this place there is a hat or even hair rolled up o n the head.

    Her genital area would appear to have been deliberately emphasized with the labia of the vulva carefully detailed and made clearly visible, perhaps unnaturally so, and as if she had no pubic hair. This, combined with her large breasts and the roundness of her stomach, suggests that the “subject” of the sculpture is female procreativity and nurture and the piece has long been identified as some sort of fertility idol.

    The fact that numerous examples like that of a female figure. All generally exhibiting the same essential characteristics – large stomachs and breasts, featureless faces, minuscule or missing feet – have been found over a broad geographical area ranging from France to Siberia. That suggests that some system of shared understanding and perception of a particular type of woman existed during the Paleolithic.

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