Fiesta used to be a soft core magazine from memory. Those days were innocent. Teenage Snapchat is more prono than those old rags.
Not in this case, although I will neither confirm or deny I have fapped a little about my next project.
Fresh Fiesta Red nitro - still warm. Updates will be irregular and unsatisfying...but I'll try.
"Man is the most insane species. He worships an invisible god and destroys a visible nature. Unaware that this nature he's destroying is this god he's worshipping." - Hubert Reeves
bender wrote:This wouldn't be to refinish a certain Jazzmaster would it?
No, the fauxjo white on that is working for me.
This one, although not that big fish I am playing, is something I have held a flame for, for a long time.
"Man is the most insane species. He worships an invisible god and destroys a visible nature. Unaware that this nature he's destroying is this god he's worshipping." - Hubert Reeves
jvpp wrote:Hmm, looks like a colour that I could use too. Looks orangy on the pics. Not?
Yes, to emulate how some Fiesta Red Fenders turn out. My paint is in direct late PM sunlight too...making it more yellow.
I'm happy to share paint - getting good Nitro like this not so easy.
"Man is the most insane species. He worships an invisible god and destroys a visible nature. Unaware that this nature he's destroying is this god he's worshipping." - Hubert Reeves
Fiesta was Britain's number one mens' magazine. I hand over to Wikipedia. Dubbed 'the magazine for men which women love to read,' the monthly magazine's readers were responsible, in the early 1970s, for creating a phenomenon that has been adopted in magazines worldwide: "Readers' Wives". Central to this theme is the monthly Readers' Wives Striptease section, which shows a set of photos of a supposed wife or girlfriend of a reader being photographed by Fiesta undressing (often, but not always out of everyday clothing) to full nudity. As well as its Readers' Wives and photographic girl sets, Fiesta was built around a core of readers' letters from men and women. The mix was spiced by male-interest features, cartoons and reviews, sexy puzzles and a regular erotic horoscope, together with Firkin, an underground-style comic strip.
Most readers say they read it for its quality articles.
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In life, don't sweat the petty stuff, and don't pet the sweaty stuff.
"Man is the most insane species. He worships an invisible god and destroys a visible nature. Unaware that this nature he's destroying is this god he's worshipping." - Hubert Reeves
werdna wrote:Fiesta was Britain's number one mens' magazine. I hand over to Wikipedia. Dubbed 'the magazine for men which women love to read,' the monthly magazine's readers were responsible, in the early 1970s, for creating a phenomenon that has been adopted in magazines worldwide: "Readers' Wives". Central to this theme is the monthly Readers' Wives Striptease section, which shows a set of photos of a supposed wife or girlfriend of a reader being photographed by Fiesta undressing (often, but not always out of everyday clothing) to full nudity. As well as its Readers' Wives and photographic girl sets, Fiesta was built around a core of readers' letters from men and women. The mix was spiced by male-interest features, cartoons and reviews, sexy puzzles and a regular erotic horoscope, together with Firkin, an underground-style comic strip.
Most readers say they read it for its quality articles.
Beyond a critical point within a finite space, freedom diminishes as numbers increase. This is as true of humans as it is of gas molecules in a sealed flask. The human question is not how many can possibly survive within the system, but what kind of existence is possible for those who so survive.