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Technicia — In Stocks [NSFW]

#bondage #bsdm #harness #stocks #bodyharness #stockbondage
Published: 2009-04-10 21:59:58 +0000 UTC; Views: 7274; Favourites: 66; Downloads: 197
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Description Kneeling, locked in a set of hinged wooden stocks
while wearing a flattering shiny leather
body harness.

This is my very first attempt at full hand coloring on the
computer of a pencil drawing [link] , started a couple days ago
after getting inspired by the Latex coloring
tutorial of ILoveShinyGirls [link]
and hair tutorial of ^ctJemm [link]

The latex came out ok, although I think it looks a bit
more like shiny red leather. The white hair did not
come out as I intended. PSP just does not paint
crisp anti-aliased lines at 1-3 pixel points so it was
just driving me nuts trying to add detail and then
having to soften it back into mush.

The skin tones nearly kicked my ass. The problem is
I do pencil shading, not "line art", and the background
of my scan of the original was not pure white but sort of
grey (see left wall). Coloring requires a lot of use of
the Multiply layer option, and when you multiply any light
color with grey and it becomes dull and dark. I finally got
the background lightened up enough to lighten up the
skin tone layer but by then had already done a bunch of
shading, which I had to fix. I still don't know where
skin tones really are in the color palette so I sampled
the colors off a lot of photos and renderings.
It seems to have come out ok in the end but I see
why a lot of people cover their colorized models up
with latex and such. Natural skin tones and shading
is tough.


Anyway, for my first attempt at being a colorist, I'm
happy with the result. Please let me know what you
think.

[edit] Updated image with a bunch of cleanup.
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Comments: 15

Captivekink [2017-10-17 13:50:48 +0000 UTC]

I keep coming back to this one all the time, and always get distracted by the technical design flaw, which is a shame since the concept is good. With both upper and lower slats fixed to the wall, how do you get the mid section in place, even if the victim is placid and holds her arms in the cut-outs for you. Her torso is going to get in the way.

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Technicia In reply to Captivekink [2017-10-21 07:36:59 +0000 UTC]

Because the hinge line at the bottom is well above the ankles, when the middle section swings forward it opens up a gap at the bottom.  
The trick is that the feet/ankles have to go in first while she'd kneeling forward (or even mostly lying face down) with the middle section resting on her butt. 
Then the middle section is swung upward trapping the ankles immediately, but leaving a good sized gap at the top until very late.
She kneels upright, puts arms behind into the remaining upper gaps, it's closed the rest of the way, and latched.  
Here's a really quick and dirty sketch of the mechanism with only ankles in place. 

Mature Content


It's a bit fiddly, but by no means impossible.  

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Captivekink In reply to Technicia [2017-10-21 14:02:01 +0000 UTC]

Ingenious. Thanks for the explanation.

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woodstock16996 [2015-08-29 20:25:59 +0000 UTC]

O!M!G! - Spectacular! That is a fantastic job. (What I wouldn't give to be put in those stocks!)  

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Technicia In reply to woodstock16996 [2015-10-08 06:54:26 +0000 UTC]

Thanks for the kind words.   This one wouldn't be too hard to construct. 

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woodstock16996 In reply to Technicia [2016-02-05 21:23:24 +0000 UTC]

Hehe...well if you ever do construct them, you can put me in them; and if you want pics to post, fine

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woodstock16996 In reply to Technicia [2015-10-08 19:31:36 +0000 UTC]

Well if you ever construct one, or know anyone who does, lemme know pleeaase!  

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masterranch [2010-06-05 17:11:51 +0000 UTC]

Very nice...

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Technicia In reply to masterranch [2010-06-06 05:18:40 +0000 UTC]

Thanks for the kind words. Not my best sketch,
but an interesting coloring exercise.

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cordefr [2009-04-13 08:42:31 +0000 UTC]

The latex colouring came out quit nice. I'd like to suggest that you redo the pencil lines of a sketch, either in ink before scanning, or on the computer. It makes the drawing look crisper.

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Technicia In reply to cordefr [2009-04-13 17:58:48 +0000 UTC]

Yep. The problem is two-fold.
1. I'm not ready to ink over my original drawings. I'll try it on a new one.
2. I'm doing all the work on the computer with a mouse, so have found it
close to impossible to trace over the pencil lines smoothly.
Using PSP instead of PS isn't helping either as PSP handles thin lines
pretty poorly. Doing my editing on a larger canvas would help there.
I worked on this one at only 800px tall so most lines are 1-2px wide.

I also sort of like the fact that you can tell it was originally pencil.
What I may try on a new one is just to add darker/sharper pencil lines
after the sketch is finished and then use levels to make them stand out
and everything else fade away, before starting to color.

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cordefr In reply to Technicia [2009-04-13 19:42:41 +0000 UTC]

I use a portable PC, so before I bought myself a tablet, I used the touchpad, which worked much better than the mouse to draw. My canvas size typically is 2500x2500 with 3 or 5 pixel linesize. Before uploading I reduce the size to 1600x1600 so that it looks smoother.

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Technicia In reply to cordefr [2009-04-13 20:49:19 +0000 UTC]

I've actually got an old workable Aiptek tablet but I
can't locate the pen for it. If I win the lottery
someday I'll get a Wacom Cintiq or decent tablet PC.

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IloveShinyGirls [2009-04-11 05:43:57 +0000 UTC]

It came out really good to be the first time, congrats! As for the skin color, get 3 sample colors from an illustration, because in photographs even with make-up, skin shows way too many colors to be of any help. And use light yellow instead of white for the lighter parts of the skin. Have fun and good luck!

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Technicia In reply to IloveShinyGirls [2009-04-11 07:03:07 +0000 UTC]

Thanks for the comment, the compliment and the advice.
You're right, light yellow skin highlights looks better.
Your latex coloring guide sort of got me started
on the right track to organizing my layers for everything.
1. Line art (with white background, learned that the hard way)
2. Primary colors on new layer with multiply mixing to the
line art with a saved selection boundary around the primary
colors to avoid splash over.
3. Highlights on new layer with normal mixing.
This one ended up with 13 layers with some sharing of the highlights.

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