O.M.G. Are those giant, enormous, NIPPLES? Ye GODS. All I can say about the Eiffel is, thank GOD, because I think it’s covering up her hoohah. And if that Phallic Eiffel is misleading, her gf has the hands of a lumberjack. (I suppose, posrein: it’s not dino porn.)
In close up, yep, nipples: she is wearing a corset w/o cups but with hose garters (I’ve lost my copy of Adult Toys’R’Us catalog but I have seen that before). The way the photo is cropped, it’s hard to tell: those hands could be hers on her hips akimbo, which might take this from OMG to WTH.
Were they silly enough to put a period after the capital M’s, or is that font poorly-designed enough to put a badly-done ball serif on the right leg of the M’s?
Looking at the balls on the cap C and lc a r v s, I suspect the cap M was designed with an extraneous ball serif. Who would want to key “My” as “M.y” and why? But the only way to find out for sure would be to identify this font, which I would only do in order to avoid it.
This is set in France, and “M.” is the abbrev, for monsieur (mister in English). You could read “M.y” as “Mistery”.
An erect phallic symbol in front of a woman in a corset, being gripped by disembodied hands. Gotta be erotica. Right?
Just checked. Erotica, yes. But let’s just say that the attention-grabbing main-component phallic symbol is… misleading.
O.M.G. Are those giant, enormous, NIPPLES? Ye GODS. All I can say about the Eiffel is, thank GOD, because I think it’s covering up her hoohah. And if that Phallic Eiffel is misleading, her gf has the hands of a lumberjack. (I suppose, posrein: it’s not dino porn.)
Lumberjack hands! YES!
In close up, yep, nipples: she is wearing a corset w/o cups but with hose garters (I’ve lost my copy of Adult Toys’R’Us catalog but I have seen that before). The way the photo is cropped, it’s hard to tell: those hands could be hers on her hips akimbo, which might take this from OMG to WTH.
M.y love
M.y dreams
M.y life
M.y goodness, what awful typography.
Boobies!!!
This cover is awesome!!
To an 11 year-old!!
(and sophomoric fools like me) – Not really!
Were they silly enough to put a period after the capital M’s, or is that font poorly-designed enough to put a badly-done ball serif on the right leg of the M’s?
Looking at the balls on the cap C and lc a r v s, I suspect the cap M was designed with an extraneous ball serif. Who would want to key “My” as “M.y” and why? But the only way to find out for sure would be to identify this font, which I would only do in order to avoid it.
This is set in France, and “M.” is the abbrev, for monsieur (mister in English). You could read “M.y” as “Mistery”.