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A Shibari Session
She is: Mel
Shibari: Khaos Strigoi
Studio: El Garaje
Photo and edition: www.isidrocea.com
Some Music?
Slave me - Scorpions
grooveshark.com/s/Slave+Me/37z0NH?src=5
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Haven't posted in awhile as I've been being trained by my 6'10" Dom.
One of my forms of punishment was posting this series of photos of me wearing the ballet moccasins my Dom makes me wear around him in public in my bare feet.
In these series of private training photos my Dom is inspecting me under bright lights, making me do forced calf raises, and standing over me taunting and humiliating me for my lack of stature.
As instructed I am to release each one as he tells me so.
This is the first one called... Inspection time.
My Dom sits there laughing at me in the slippers while he calls me a fat little slipper slave. He taunts me to the point that I start crying.
More to come...
I always wanted to make an updated version of the 2000 Slave 1 (7144). Bought most the pieces I needed, then LEGO released the Cloud City set.. and I just never really liked the Slave 1 in that set. So I ended up using the base from that and built a new top to resemble 7144 more closely. So I guess you could call it a Mod not a MOC
Abraham Lincoln Monument, Old Calton Burial Ground, Edinburgh. It was built in 1893, to commemorate the Scots who fought on behalf of the Union during the American Civil War. Their names are inscribed on the memorial, which depicts a slave at the feet of Lincoln being released from shackles.
See also flic.kr/p/2j1fK1u
(Written on a piece of marble to describe them) :
These huts were constructed in 1850 during the slavery time, and served as camping facilities for slaves working in the salt ponds to collect and ship the salt, one of Bonaire most important export product. These huts were used as sleeping quarters and place to put away personal belongings of the working team.
Personal note: you can't stand up inside those. Two years before, slavery was already abolished in Martinique, Guadeloupe and french Guyana.
Summer R. as Slave Girl Leia. I was hoping for a joke with the "Star Wars Stuff" sign in the background, but I don't think it works, mostly because nobody's looking at the sign anyway.
I mentioned to her that she was the only Slave Girl Leia I had seen all weekend, and she said, "Really? Maybe that's why I'm getting mobbed today." With all due respect, it's not just because she had a unique costume.
Make It Interesting • Challenge No 2 (Clocktower)
Source image with thanks to Ell Brown
models from Null-Entity: www.deviantart.com/art/Kneeling-Reaching-Perspective-Down...
background stock courtesy of www.pixabay.com
Voronezh is a city and the administrative centre of Voronezh Oblast in southwestern Russia straddling the Voronezh River, located 12 kilometers (7.5 mi) from where it flows into the Don River. The city sits on the Southeastern Railway, which connects western Russia with the Urals and Siberia, the Caucasus and Ukraine, and the M4 highway (Moscow–Voronezh–Rostov-on-Don–Novorossiysk). In recent years the city has experienced rapid population growth, rising in 2021 to 1,057,681, up from 889,680 recorded in the 2010 Census, making it the 14th-most populous city in the country.
For many years, the hypothesis of the Soviet historian Vladimir Zagorovsky dominated: he produced the toponym "Voronezh" from the hypothetical Slavic personal name Voroneg. This man allegedly gave the name of a small town in the Chernigov Principality (now the village of Voronizh in Ukraine). Later, in the 11th or 12th century, the settlers were able to "transfer" this name to the Don region, where they named the second city Voronezh, and the river got its name from the city. However, now many researchers criticize the hypothesis, since in reality neither the name of Voroneg nor the second city was revealed, and usually the names of Russian cities repeated the names of the rivers, but not vice versa.
A comprehensive scientific analysis was conducted in 2015–2016 by the historian Pavel Popov. His conclusion: "Voronezh" is a probable Slavic macrotoponym associated with outstanding signs of nature, has a root voron- (from the proto-Slavic vorn) in the meaning of "black, dark" and the suffix -ezh (-azh, -ozh). It was not “transferred” and in the 8th - 9th centuries it marked a vast territory covered with black forests (oak forests) - from the mouth of the Voronezh river to the Voronozhsky annalistic forests in the middle and upper reaches of the river, and in the west to the Don (many forests were cut down). The historian believes that the main "city" of the early town-planning complex could repeat the name of the region – Voronezh. Now the hillfort is located in the administrative part of the modern city, in the Voronezh upland oak forest. This is one of Europe's largest ancient Slavic hillforts, the area of which – more than 9 hectares – 13 times the area of the main settlement in Kyiv before the baptism of Rus.
In it is assumed that the word "Voronezh" means bluing - a technique to increase the corrosion resistance of iron products. This explanation fits well with the proximity to the ancient city of Voronezh of a large iron deposit and the city of Stary Oskol. As well as the name of Voroneț Monastery known for its blue shade.
Folk etymology claims the name comes from combining the Russian words for raven (ворон) and hedgehog (еж) into Воронеж. According to this explanation two Slavic tribes named after the animals used this combination to name the river which later in turn provided the name for a settlement. There is not believed to be any scientific support for this explanation.
In the 16th century, the Middle Don basin, including the Voronezh river, was gradually conquered by Muscovy from the Nogai Horde (a successor state of the Golden Horde), and the current city of Voronezh was established in 1585 by Feodor I as a fort protecting the Muravsky Trail trade route against the slave raids of the Nogai and Crimean Tatars. The city was named after the river.
17th to 19th centuries
In the 17th century, Voronezh gradually evolved into a sizable town. Weronecz is shown on the Worona river in Resania in Joan Blaeu's map of 1645. Peter the Great built a dockyard in Voronezh where the Azov Flotilla was constructed for the Azov campaigns in 1695 and 1696. This fleet, the first ever built in Russia, included the first Russian ship of the line, Goto Predestinatsia. The Orthodox diocese of Voronezh was instituted in 1682 and its first bishop, Mitrofan of Voronezh, was later proclaimed the town's patron saint.
Owing to the Voronezh Admiralty Wharf, for a short time, Voronezh became the largest city of South Russia and the economic center of a large and fertile region. In 1711, it was made the seat of the Azov Governorate, which eventually morphed into the Voronezh Governorate.
In the 19th century, Voronezh was a center of the Central Black Earth Region. Manufacturing industry (mills, tallow-melting, butter-making, soap, leather, and other works) as well as bread, cattle, suet, and the hair trade developed in the town. A railway connected Voronezh with Moscow in 1868 and Rostov-on-Don in 1871.