Blue Blood Newswire Blue Blood Community Blue Blood Galleries Blue Blood Links Blue Blood Tags Blue Blood Boutique Blue Blood Newsletter Blue Blood About Us BlueBlood.com
Whitby Goth Weekend April 2008

DC East Coast OG

Darklady

One Missed Call Movie

Hex VIP Industry

Young Hollywood Party

Young Hollywood Video Production Stills

BLUEBLOOD.NET

Posts tagged:

Scar 13 on the Cover of Buckle Magazine

by Amelia G : September 23rd, 2006

Scar 13 on the cover of Buckle Magazine If you are in Hotlanta right now, you’d best be getting ready to strap it on tonight. Blue Blood board members have already seen some shots of Kellie and Scar (and Pika) getting geared up to party. There is a new fetish magazine in the U.S. called Buckle and they are throwing a shindig tonight.

I haven’t seen the magazine yet, so I can’t swear that it is great, but they’ve got some good people on board. Buckle’s first ish featured photographer Steve Diet Goedde. Blue Blood has shared exhibit space with Steve more than once and, more importantly, he was the first person (besides Forrest Black of course) to tell me that I really needed to set up a membership site. Steve’s advice has been terrific. Buckle’s second issue featured photographer Kelly Lind and his co-conspirator makeup artist Alex LaMarsh who are responsible for a whole lot of sets on BlueBlood.com. We’re very excited that issue number three of Buckle feature’s Blue Blood’s own Scar 13 on the cover. Blue Blood hotties are covergirls. The shot is by photographer Brian Bothwell who model Kerry Scarey tells me got his first magazine credit ever when I chose an image he shot of her to print in Swag magazine.

Mistress Domiana on the cover of Marquis Magazine So it seems like Buckle Magazine should be of interest to Blue Blood folks. My only reservation about it, aside of course from not having seen it yet, is that I’ve seen a lot of statements online to the effect that Buckle is going to blow Marquis and Skin Two out of the water in …

Class, Self-Hating Freaks, Punk Rock Success, and Lollipop Magazine is Sweet to Amelia

by Amelia G : September 7th, 2006

photo of Amelia G shot by Forrest Black to run with editorial In March of 2003 I wrote an opening editorial for the late lamented Swag magazine project. The editorial was about how a lot of freaks internalize the negativity the larger society has for them. It was about how punk was supposed to promise the allure of a classless society. It was about how we shouldn’t hammer ourselves down because we deserve the rewards of the larger society, at least as much as anyone. The mere existence of this editorial is ironic in so many ways. I have no idea how many people read this the first time around, though, so I’d like to share it online now.

You should also definitely read the piece on Swag, by my old school, zine explosion compatriot Scott Hefflon, which ran first in Lollipop in print, and is now reprinted on Lollipop online. Part of what Scott had to say about the content Forrest Black and I and our pals created was, “It’s really surprising how rarely you find something unique in these “alternative” times. So many things still tow the line, the line is just called something else . . . So yeah, on the surface, Swag could look like a Gothic fashion mag. Lots of scantily-clad vixens, most of them models for one of the sites under the Blue Blood umbrella, but seeing as Amelia G and Forrest Black are top-notch Goth/fetish photographers and have great taste in hotties as well as the few bits of clothing the models wear, that’s far from a bad thing . . . What makes Swag cool is what doesn’t become clear right at first. Style . . . It was fun, I learned a couple …

Macrantha Spider Pictures
by Senior_Diablo
Your favorite artistic medium
by a_small_death
Can you imagine looking over at this guy while sto...
by Senior_Diablo
whatcha look like thread
by Senior_Diablo
Minimizing Shaving Irritation
by Bikerpunk
Do you believe in Magic?
by Morning Glory
Bask in my hairless kitten-ness
by Morning Glory
Ever posted from your phone?
by OliX
One of the Boys that killed a Goth Girl in a Park ...
by Head Wreck
No one is safe. From the cult of Emo.
by Head Wreck