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DUKAS_162764332_EYE
The best sex workshops in London. Flora Gill takes part in the Scotty Unfamous sex workshop at the Curtain Club, Shoreditch
From self pleasure to spanking and the Japanese art of shibari bondage, Flora Gill takes in the best of the capital's sex education.
Sex lessons and workshops are no longer reserved for light entertainment or secretly hidden away in dark meetups. In the last few years sex workshops have popped up all over London with one noticeable change: there's no shame attached. The classes often come with a community and thriving social media account where creators proudly share their face and their tips with the world.
At a recent workshop I attended the room was surrounded by sexual items.
I assumed we'd jump straight into kinky tips but instead each attendee was encouraged to share something they had previously felt shame about. We spent over 30 minutes sharing our shame, airing it out not like dirty laundry but like dusty items we'd unnecessarily hidden away for years.
Sex workshop for women led by Scotty Unfamous at The Curtain Club, Shoreditch.
© Lucy Young / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_162764329_EYE
The best sex workshops in London. Flora Gill takes part in the Scotty Unfamous sex workshop at the Curtain Club, Shoreditch
From self pleasure to spanking and the Japanese art of shibari bondage, Flora Gill takes in the best of the capital's sex education.
Sex lessons and workshops are no longer reserved for light entertainment or secretly hidden away in dark meetups. In the last few years sex workshops have popped up all over London with one noticeable change: there's no shame attached. The classes often come with a community and thriving social media account where creators proudly share their face and their tips with the world.
At a recent workshop I attended the room was surrounded by sexual items.
I assumed we'd jump straight into kinky tips but instead each attendee was encouraged to share something they had previously felt shame about. We spent over 30 minutes sharing our shame, airing it out not like dirty laundry but like dusty items we'd unnecessarily hidden away for years.
Journalist Flora Gill takes part in a Sex workshop for women led by Scotty Unfamous at The Curtain Club, Shoreditch.
© Lucy Young / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_162764333_EYE
The best sex workshops in London. Flora Gill takes part in the Scotty Unfamous sex workshop at the Curtain Club, Shoreditch
From self pleasure to spanking and the Japanese art of shibari bondage, Flora Gill takes in the best of the capital's sex education.
Sex lessons and workshops are no longer reserved for light entertainment or secretly hidden away in dark meetups. In the last few years sex workshops have popped up all over London with one noticeable change: there's no shame attached. The classes often come with a community and thriving social media account where creators proudly share their face and their tips with the world.
At a recent workshop I attended the room was surrounded by sexual items.
I assumed we'd jump straight into kinky tips but instead each attendee was encouraged to share something they had previously felt shame about. We spent over 30 minutes sharing our shame, airing it out not like dirty laundry but like dusty items we'd unnecessarily hidden away for years.
Sex workshop for women led by Scotty Unfamous at The Curtain Club, Shoreditch.
© Lucy Young / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_162764322_EYE
The best sex workshops in London. Flora Gill takes part in the Scotty Unfamous sex workshop at the Curtain Club, Shoreditch
From self pleasure to spanking and the Japanese art of shibari bondage, Flora Gill takes in the best of the capital's sex education.
Sex lessons and workshops are no longer reserved for light entertainment or secretly hidden away in dark meetups. In the last few years sex workshops have popped up all over London with one noticeable change: there's no shame attached. The classes often come with a community and thriving social media account where creators proudly share their face and their tips with the world.
At a recent workshop I attended the room was surrounded by sexual items.
I assumed we'd jump straight into kinky tips but instead each attendee was encouraged to share something they had previously felt shame about. We spent over 30 minutes sharing our shame, airing it out not like dirty laundry but like dusty items we'd unnecessarily hidden away for years.
Sex workshop for women led by Scotty Unfamous at The Curtain Club, Shoreditch.
© Lucy Young / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_162764331_EYE
The best sex workshops in London. Flora Gill takes part in the Scotty Unfamous sex workshop at the Curtain Club, Shoreditch
From self pleasure to spanking and the Japanese art of shibari bondage, Flora Gill takes in the best of the capital's sex education.
Sex lessons and workshops are no longer reserved for light entertainment or secretly hidden away in dark meetups. In the last few years sex workshops have popped up all over London with one noticeable change: there's no shame attached. The classes often come with a community and thriving social media account where creators proudly share their face and their tips with the world.
At a recent workshop I attended the room was surrounded by sexual items.
I assumed we'd jump straight into kinky tips but instead each attendee was encouraged to share something they had previously felt shame about. We spent over 30 minutes sharing our shame, airing it out not like dirty laundry but like dusty items we'd unnecessarily hidden away for years.
Sex workshop for women led by Scotty Unfamous at The Curtain Club, Shoreditch.
© Lucy Young / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_162764320_EYE
The best sex workshops in London. Flora Gill takes part in the Scotty Unfamous sex workshop at the Curtain Club, Shoreditch
From self pleasure to spanking and the Japanese art of shibari bondage, Flora Gill takes in the best of the capital's sex education.
Sex lessons and workshops are no longer reserved for light entertainment or secretly hidden away in dark meetups. In the last few years sex workshops have popped up all over London with one noticeable change: there's no shame attached. The classes often come with a community and thriving social media account where creators proudly share their face and their tips with the world.
At a recent workshop I attended the room was surrounded by sexual items.
I assumed we'd jump straight into kinky tips but instead each attendee was encouraged to share something they had previously felt shame about. We spent over 30 minutes sharing our shame, airing it out not like dirty laundry but like dusty items we'd unnecessarily hidden away for years.
Sex workshop for women led by Scotty Unfamous at The Curtain Club, Shoreditch.
© Lucy Young / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_162764318_EYE
The best sex workshops in London. Flora Gill takes part in the Scotty Unfamous sex workshop at the Curtain Club, Shoreditch
From self pleasure to spanking and the Japanese art of shibari bondage, Flora Gill takes in the best of the capital's sex education.
Sex lessons and workshops are no longer reserved for light entertainment or secretly hidden away in dark meetups. In the last few years sex workshops have popped up all over London with one noticeable change: there's no shame attached. The classes often come with a community and thriving social media account where creators proudly share their face and their tips with the world.
At a recent workshop I attended the room was surrounded by sexual items.
I assumed we'd jump straight into kinky tips but instead each attendee was encouraged to share something they had previously felt shame about. We spent over 30 minutes sharing our shame, airing it out not like dirty laundry but like dusty items we'd unnecessarily hidden away for years.
Sex workshop for women led by Scotty Unfamous at The Curtain Club, Shoreditch.
© Lucy Young / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_162764321_EYE
The best sex workshops in London. Flora Gill takes part in the Scotty Unfamous sex workshop at the Curtain Club, Shoreditch
From self pleasure to spanking and the Japanese art of shibari bondage, Flora Gill takes in the best of the capital's sex education.
Sex lessons and workshops are no longer reserved for light entertainment or secretly hidden away in dark meetups. In the last few years sex workshops have popped up all over London with one noticeable change: there's no shame attached. The classes often come with a community and thriving social media account where creators proudly share their face and their tips with the world.
At a recent workshop I attended the room was surrounded by sexual items.
I assumed we'd jump straight into kinky tips but instead each attendee was encouraged to share something they had previously felt shame about. We spent over 30 minutes sharing our shame, airing it out not like dirty laundry but like dusty items we'd unnecessarily hidden away for years.
Journalist Flora Gill takes part in a Sex workshop for women led by Scotty Unfamous at The Curtain Club, Shoreditch.
© Lucy Young / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_162764317_EYE
The best sex workshops in London. Flora Gill takes part in the Scotty Unfamous sex workshop at the Curtain Club, Shoreditch
From self pleasure to spanking and the Japanese art of shibari bondage, Flora Gill takes in the best of the capital's sex education.
Sex lessons and workshops are no longer reserved for light entertainment or secretly hidden away in dark meetups. In the last few years sex workshops have popped up all over London with one noticeable change: there's no shame attached. The classes often come with a community and thriving social media account where creators proudly share their face and their tips with the world.
At a recent workshop I attended the room was surrounded by sexual items.
I assumed we'd jump straight into kinky tips but instead each attendee was encouraged to share something they had previously felt shame about. We spent over 30 minutes sharing our shame, airing it out not like dirty laundry but like dusty items we'd unnecessarily hidden away for years.
Journalist Flora Gill takes part in a Sex workshop for women led by Scotty Unfamous at The Curtain Club, Shoreditch.
© Lucy Young / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_162764316_EYE
The best sex workshops in London. Flora Gill takes part in the Scotty Unfamous sex workshop at the Curtain Club, Shoreditch
From self pleasure to spanking and the Japanese art of shibari bondage, Flora Gill takes in the best of the capital's sex education.
Sex lessons and workshops are no longer reserved for light entertainment or secretly hidden away in dark meetups. In the last few years sex workshops have popped up all over London with one noticeable change: there's no shame attached. The classes often come with a community and thriving social media account where creators proudly share their face and their tips with the world.
At a recent workshop I attended the room was surrounded by sexual items.
I assumed we'd jump straight into kinky tips but instead each attendee was encouraged to share something they had previously felt shame about. We spent over 30 minutes sharing our shame, airing it out not like dirty laundry but like dusty items we'd unnecessarily hidden away for years.
Journalist Flora Gill takes part in a Sex workshop for women led by Scotty Unfamous at The Curtain Club, Shoreditch.
© Lucy Young / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUK10024413_019
NEWS - Brüssel Pride 2016
Brussels / May 2016
The pride is a demonstration of tolerance about all sexuals gender.
This year, organisation wont put the light about transexuals rights in the world.
Most political personaity was present ti support this action.
Reporters / Hanssens (FOTO:DUKAS/REPORTERS)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10024413_018
NEWS - Brüssel Pride 2016
Brussels / May 2016
The pride is a demonstration of tolerance about all sexuals gender.
This year, organisation wont put the light about transexuals rights in the world.
Most political personaity was present ti support this action.
Reporters / Hanssens (FOTO:DUKAS/REPORTERS)
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_46058217_SIP
Tie me up: The Art of Shibari or Kinbaku
The origin of the Shibari comes from Hojo-jutsu, the martial art of restraining captives, very practiced in Japan in the 1400s.
The Shibari,gradually recognized as a major art and aesthetics, has become a very popular art of bondage in Japan in the 1950's and shows up now in Europe.
The kinbaku is a type of Japanese sexual bondage for sadomasochistic games.
In the 1990s,the term " Shibari ", which is used in Japan to describe the art of tying packages , became the most popular name in the West. It refers to the art of bondage kinbaku. At first,the Kinbaku, equated to martial arts , Êis called "Hojojutsu". It is originally a method of torture, whose the technique differs depending on the rank of the prisoner. Then it turned into an erotic game and an art of erotic spirituality.
In the Shibari, the model is the canvas, the rope is the paint and brush, and the rigger is the rope artist. The positioning of knots in appropriate places stimulates pressure points on the body, very similarly to acupuncture techniques and Shiatsu.
The japanese bondage differs from western bondage because instead of immobilizing the subject and practicing certain constraints, the techniques of the shibari add to this basic concept an aesthetic point of view, even erotic, and the stimulation of energy centers at specific points of the body.
A great complicity and collaboration between the artist and the model is essential to create a combination of effects.
The Shibari can also be used as a component in BDSM games and an enhancement in sexual activities.
The Shibari is characterized by the use of a purely artistic, aesthetic rope, whilst the kinbaku refers to the connective, sensual, sexual practice as a whole.
In Rome, a Kinbaku meeting has killed a young woman and his girlfriend is still in a coma. The Shibari is not to be taken lightly and must be supervised by professionals: it is, in fact, responsible for a thousand fatalities per year. /BONY_1430.03/Credit:BONY/SIPA/1501051451
DUKAS/SIPA -
DUKAS_46058213_SIP
Tie me up: The Art of Shibari or Kinbaku
The origin of the Shibari comes from Hojo-jutsu, the martial art of restraining captives, very practiced in Japan in the 1400s.
The Shibari,gradually recognized as a major art and aesthetics, has become a very popular art of bondage in Japan in the 1950's and shows up now in Europe.
The kinbaku is a type of Japanese sexual bondage for sadomasochistic games.
In the 1990s,the term " Shibari ", which is used in Japan to describe the art of tying packages , became the most popular name in the West. It refers to the art of bondage kinbaku. At first,the Kinbaku, equated to martial arts , Êis called "Hojojutsu". It is originally a method of torture, whose the technique differs depending on the rank of the prisoner. Then it turned into an erotic game and an art of erotic spirituality.
In the Shibari, the model is the canvas, the rope is the paint and brush, and the rigger is the rope artist. The positioning of knots in appropriate places stimulates pressure points on the body, very similarly to acupuncture techniques and Shiatsu.
The japanese bondage differs from western bondage because instead of immobilizing the subject and practicing certain constraints, the techniques of the shibari add to this basic concept an aesthetic point of view, even erotic, and the stimulation of energy centers at specific points of the body.
A great complicity and collaboration between the artist and the model is essential to create a combination of effects.
The Shibari can also be used as a component in BDSM games and an enhancement in sexual activities.
The Shibari is characterized by the use of a purely artistic, aesthetic rope, whilst the kinbaku refers to the connective, sensual, sexual practice as a whole.
In Rome, a Kinbaku meeting has killed a young woman and his girlfriend is still in a coma. The Shibari is not to be taken lightly and must be supervised by professionals: it is, in fact, responsible for a thousand fatalities per year. /BONY_1430.16/Credit:BONY/SIPA/1501051451
DUKAS/SIPA -
DUKAS_46057983_SIP
Tie me up: The Art of Shibari or Kinbaku
The origin of the Shibari comes from Hojo-jutsu, the martial art of restraining captives, very practiced in Japan in the 1400s.
The Shibari,gradually recognized as a major art and aesthetics, has become a very popular art of bondage in Japan in the 1950's and shows up now in Europe.
The kinbaku is a type of Japanese sexual bondage for sadomasochistic games.
In the 1990s,the term " Shibari ", which is used in Japan to describe the art of tying packages , became the most popular name in the West. It refers to the art of bondage kinbaku. At first,the Kinbaku, equated to martial arts , Êis called "Hojojutsu". It is originally a method of torture, whose the technique differs depending on the rank of the prisoner. Then it turned into an erotic game and an art of erotic spirituality.
In the Shibari, the model is the canvas, the rope is the paint and brush, and the rigger is the rope artist. The positioning of knots in appropriate places stimulates pressure points on the body, very similarly to acupuncture techniques and Shiatsu.
The japanese bondage differs from western bondage because instead of immobilizing the subject and practicing certain constraints, the techniques of the shibari add to this basic concept an aesthetic point of view, even erotic, and the stimulation of energy centers at specific points of the body.
A great complicity and collaboration between the artist and the model is essential to create a combination of effects.
The Shibari can also be used as a component in BDSM games and an enhancement in sexual activities.
The Shibari is characterized by the use of a purely artistic, aesthetic rope, whilst the kinbaku refers to the connective, sensual, sexual practice as a whole.
In Rome, a Kinbaku meeting has killed a young woman and his girlfriend is still in a coma. The Shibari is not to be taken lightly and must be supervised by professionals: it is, in fact, responsible for a thousand fatalities per year. /BONY_1430.35/Credit:BONY/SIPA/1501051451
DUKAS/SIPA -
DUKAS_46058211_SIP
Tie me up: The Art of Shibari or Kinbaku
The origin of the Shibari comes from Hojo-jutsu, the martial art of restraining captives, very practiced in Japan in the 1400s.
The Shibari,gradually recognized as a major art and aesthetics, has become a very popular art of bondage in Japan in the 1950's and shows up now in Europe.
The kinbaku is a type of Japanese sexual bondage for sadomasochistic games.
In the 1990s,the term " Shibari ", which is used in Japan to describe the art of tying packages , became the most popular name in the West. It refers to the art of bondage kinbaku. At first,the Kinbaku, equated to martial arts , Êis called "Hojojutsu". It is originally a method of torture, whose the technique differs depending on the rank of the prisoner. Then it turned into an erotic game and an art of erotic spirituality.
In the Shibari, the model is the canvas, the rope is the paint and brush, and the rigger is the rope artist. The positioning of knots in appropriate places stimulates pressure points on the body, very similarly to acupuncture techniques and Shiatsu.
The japanese bondage differs from western bondage because instead of immobilizing the subject and practicing certain constraints, the techniques of the shibari add to this basic concept an aesthetic point of view, even erotic, and the stimulation of energy centers at specific points of the body.
A great complicity and collaboration between the artist and the model is essential to create a combination of effects.
The Shibari can also be used as a component in BDSM games and an enhancement in sexual activities.
The Shibari is characterized by the use of a purely artistic, aesthetic rope, whilst the kinbaku refers to the connective, sensual, sexual practice as a whole.
In Rome, a Kinbaku meeting has killed a young woman and his girlfriend is still in a coma. The Shibari is not to be taken lightly and must be supervised by professionals: it is, in fact, responsible for a thousand fatalities per year. /BONY_1430.10/Credit:BONY/SIPA/1501051451
DUKAS/SIPA -
DUKAS_46058209_SIP
Tie me up: The Art of Shibari or Kinbaku
The origin of the Shibari comes from Hojo-jutsu, the martial art of restraining captives, very practiced in Japan in the 1400s.
The Shibari,gradually recognized as a major art and aesthetics, has become a very popular art of bondage in Japan in the 1950's and shows up now in Europe.
The kinbaku is a type of Japanese sexual bondage for sadomasochistic games.
In the 1990s,the term " Shibari ", which is used in Japan to describe the art of tying packages , became the most popular name in the West. It refers to the art of bondage kinbaku. At first,the Kinbaku, equated to martial arts , Êis called "Hojojutsu". It is originally a method of torture, whose the technique differs depending on the rank of the prisoner. Then it turned into an erotic game and an art of erotic spirituality.
In the Shibari, the model is the canvas, the rope is the paint and brush, and the rigger is the rope artist. The positioning of knots in appropriate places stimulates pressure points on the body, very similarly to acupuncture techniques and Shiatsu.
The japanese bondage differs from western bondage because instead of immobilizing the subject and practicing certain constraints, the techniques of the shibari add to this basic concept an aesthetic point of view, even erotic, and the stimulation of energy centers at specific points of the body.
A great complicity and collaboration between the artist and the model is essential to create a combination of effects.
The Shibari can also be used as a component in BDSM games and an enhancement in sexual activities.
The Shibari is characterized by the use of a purely artistic, aesthetic rope, whilst the kinbaku refers to the connective, sensual, sexual practice as a whole.
In Rome, a Kinbaku meeting has killed a young woman and his girlfriend is still in a coma. The Shibari is not to be taken lightly and must be supervised by professionals: it is, in fact, responsible for a thousand fatalities per year. /BONY_1430.07/Credit:BONY/SIPA/1501051451
DUKAS/SIPA -
DUKAS_46058207_SIP
Tie me up: The Art of Shibari or Kinbaku
The origin of the Shibari comes from Hojo-jutsu, the martial art of restraining captives, very practiced in Japan in the 1400s.
The Shibari,gradually recognized as a major art and aesthetics, has become a very popular art of bondage in Japan in the 1950's and shows up now in Europe.
The kinbaku is a type of Japanese sexual bondage for sadomasochistic games.
In the 1990s,the term " Shibari ", which is used in Japan to describe the art of tying packages , became the most popular name in the West. It refers to the art of bondage kinbaku. At first,the Kinbaku, equated to martial arts , Êis called "Hojojutsu". It is originally a method of torture, whose the technique differs depending on the rank of the prisoner. Then it turned into an erotic game and an art of erotic spirituality.
In the Shibari, the model is the canvas, the rope is the paint and brush, and the rigger is the rope artist. The positioning of knots in appropriate places stimulates pressure points on the body, very similarly to acupuncture techniques and Shiatsu.
The japanese bondage differs from western bondage because instead of immobilizing the subject and practicing certain constraints, the techniques of the shibari add to this basic concept an aesthetic point of view, even erotic, and the stimulation of energy centers at specific points of the body.
A great complicity and collaboration between the artist and the model is essential to create a combination of effects.
The Shibari can also be used as a component in BDSM games and an enhancement in sexual activities.
The Shibari is characterized by the use of a purely artistic, aesthetic rope, whilst the kinbaku refers to the connective, sensual, sexual practice as a whole.
In Rome, a Kinbaku meeting has killed a young woman and his girlfriend is still in a coma. The Shibari is not to be taken lightly and must be supervised by professionals: it is, in fact, responsible for a thousand fatalities per year. /BONY_1430.32/Credit:BONY/SIPA/1501051451
DUKAS/SIPA -
DUKAS_46058202_SIP
Tie me up: The Art of Shibari or Kinbaku
The origin of the Shibari comes from Hojo-jutsu, the martial art of restraining captives, very practiced in Japan in the 1400s.
The Shibari,gradually recognized as a major art and aesthetics, has become a very popular art of bondage in Japan in the 1950's and shows up now in Europe.
The kinbaku is a type of Japanese sexual bondage for sadomasochistic games.
In the 1990s,the term " Shibari ", which is used in Japan to describe the art of tying packages , became the most popular name in the West. It refers to the art of bondage kinbaku. At first,the Kinbaku, equated to martial arts , Êis called "Hojojutsu". It is originally a method of torture, whose the technique differs depending on the rank of the prisoner. Then it turned into an erotic game and an art of erotic spirituality.
In the Shibari, the model is the canvas, the rope is the paint and brush, and the rigger is the rope artist. The positioning of knots in appropriate places stimulates pressure points on the body, very similarly to acupuncture techniques and Shiatsu.
The japanese bondage differs from western bondage because instead of immobilizing the subject and practicing certain constraints, the techniques of the shibari add to this basic concept an aesthetic point of view, even erotic, and the stimulation of energy centers at specific points of the body.
A great complicity and collaboration between the artist and the model is essential to create a combination of effects.
The Shibari can also be used as a component in BDSM games and an enhancement in sexual activities.
The Shibari is characterized by the use of a purely artistic, aesthetic rope, whilst the kinbaku refers to the connective, sensual, sexual practice as a whole.
In Rome, a Kinbaku meeting has killed a young woman and his girlfriend is still in a coma. The Shibari is not to be taken lightly and must be supervised by professionals: it is, in fact, responsible for a thousand fatalities per year. /BONY_1430.14/Credit:BONY/SIPA/1501051451
DUKAS/SIPA -
DUKAS_46058200_SIP
Tie me up: The Art of Shibari or Kinbaku
The origin of the Shibari comes from Hojo-jutsu, the martial art of restraining captives, very practiced in Japan in the 1400s.
The Shibari,gradually recognized as a major art and aesthetics, has become a very popular art of bondage in Japan in the 1950's and shows up now in Europe.
The kinbaku is a type of Japanese sexual bondage for sadomasochistic games.
In the 1990s,the term " Shibari ", which is used in Japan to describe the art of tying packages , became the most popular name in the West. It refers to the art of bondage kinbaku. At first,the Kinbaku, equated to martial arts , Êis called "Hojojutsu". It is originally a method of torture, whose the technique differs depending on the rank of the prisoner. Then it turned into an erotic game and an art of erotic spirituality.
In the Shibari, the model is the canvas, the rope is the paint and brush, and the rigger is the rope artist. The positioning of knots in appropriate places stimulates pressure points on the body, very similarly to acupuncture techniques and Shiatsu.
The japanese bondage differs from western bondage because instead of immobilizing the subject and practicing certain constraints, the techniques of the shibari add to this basic concept an aesthetic point of view, even erotic, and the stimulation of energy centers at specific points of the body.
A great complicity and collaboration between the artist and the model is essential to create a combination of effects.
The Shibari can also be used as a component in BDSM games and an enhancement in sexual activities.
The Shibari is characterized by the use of a purely artistic, aesthetic rope, whilst the kinbaku refers to the connective, sensual, sexual practice as a whole.
In Rome, a Kinbaku meeting has killed a young woman and his girlfriend is still in a coma. The Shibari is not to be taken lightly and must be supervised by professionals: it is, in fact, responsible for a thousand fatalities per year. /BONY_1430.28/Credit:BONY/SIPA/1501051451
DUKAS/SIPA -
DUKAS_46058199_SIP
Tie me up: The Art of Shibari or Kinbaku
The origin of the Shibari comes from Hojo-jutsu, the martial art of restraining captives, very practiced in Japan in the 1400s.
The Shibari,gradually recognized as a major art and aesthetics, has become a very popular art of bondage in Japan in the 1950's and shows up now in Europe.
The kinbaku is a type of Japanese sexual bondage for sadomasochistic games.
In the 1990s,the term " Shibari ", which is used in Japan to describe the art of tying packages , became the most popular name in the West. It refers to the art of bondage kinbaku. At first,the Kinbaku, equated to martial arts , Êis called "Hojojutsu". It is originally a method of torture, whose the technique differs depending on the rank of the prisoner. Then it turned into an erotic game and an art of erotic spirituality.
In the Shibari, the model is the canvas, the rope is the paint and brush, and the rigger is the rope artist. The positioning of knots in appropriate places stimulates pressure points on the body, very similarly to acupuncture techniques and Shiatsu.
The japanese bondage differs from western bondage because instead of immobilizing the subject and practicing certain constraints, the techniques of the shibari add to this basic concept an aesthetic point of view, even erotic, and the stimulation of energy centers at specific points of the body.
A great complicity and collaboration between the artist and the model is essential to create a combination of effects.
The Shibari can also be used as a component in BDSM games and an enhancement in sexual activities.
The Shibari is characterized by the use of a purely artistic, aesthetic rope, whilst the kinbaku refers to the connective, sensual, sexual practice as a whole.
In Rome, a Kinbaku meeting has killed a young woman and his girlfriend is still in a coma. The Shibari is not to be taken lightly and must be supervised by professionals: it is, in fact, responsible for a thousand fatalities per year. /BONY_1430.12/Credit:BONY/SIPA/1501051451
DUKAS/SIPA -
DUKAS_46058194_SIP
Tie me up: The Art of Shibari or Kinbaku
The origin of the Shibari comes from Hojo-jutsu, the martial art of restraining captives, very practiced in Japan in the 1400s.
The Shibari,gradually recognized as a major art and aesthetics, has become a very popular art of bondage in Japan in the 1950's and shows up now in Europe.
The kinbaku is a type of Japanese sexual bondage for sadomasochistic games.
In the 1990s,the term " Shibari ", which is used in Japan to describe the art of tying packages , became the most popular name in the West. It refers to the art of bondage kinbaku. At first,the Kinbaku, equated to martial arts , Êis called "Hojojutsu". It is originally a method of torture, whose the technique differs depending on the rank of the prisoner. Then it turned into an erotic game and an art of erotic spirituality.
In the Shibari, the model is the canvas, the rope is the paint and brush, and the rigger is the rope artist. The positioning of knots in appropriate places stimulates pressure points on the body, very similarly to acupuncture techniques and Shiatsu.
The japanese bondage differs from western bondage because instead of immobilizing the subject and practicing certain constraints, the techniques of the shibari add to this basic concept an aesthetic point of view, even erotic, and the stimulation of energy centers at specific points of the body.
A great complicity and collaboration between the artist and the model is essential to create a combination of effects.
The Shibari can also be used as a component in BDSM games and an enhancement in sexual activities.
The Shibari is characterized by the use of a purely artistic, aesthetic rope, whilst the kinbaku refers to the connective, sensual, sexual practice as a whole.
In Rome, a Kinbaku meeting has killed a young woman and his girlfriend is still in a coma. The Shibari is not to be taken lightly and must be supervised by professionals: it is, in fact, responsible for a thousand fatalities per year. /BONY_1430.18/Credit:BONY/SIPA/1501051451
DUKAS/SIPA -
DUKAS_46058192_SIP
Tie me up: The Art of Shibari or Kinbaku
The origin of the Shibari comes from Hojo-jutsu, the martial art of restraining captives, very practiced in Japan in the 1400s.
The Shibari,gradually recognized as a major art and aesthetics, has become a very popular art of bondage in Japan in the 1950's and shows up now in Europe.
The kinbaku is a type of Japanese sexual bondage for sadomasochistic games.
In the 1990s,the term " Shibari ", which is used in Japan to describe the art of tying packages , became the most popular name in the West. It refers to the art of bondage kinbaku. At first,the Kinbaku, equated to martial arts , Êis called "Hojojutsu". It is originally a method of torture, whose the technique differs depending on the rank of the prisoner. Then it turned into an erotic game and an art of erotic spirituality.
In the Shibari, the model is the canvas, the rope is the paint and brush, and the rigger is the rope artist. The positioning of knots in appropriate places stimulates pressure points on the body, very similarly to acupuncture techniques and Shiatsu.
The japanese bondage differs from western bondage because instead of immobilizing the subject and practicing certain constraints, the techniques of the shibari add to this basic concept an aesthetic point of view, even erotic, and the stimulation of energy centers at specific points of the body.
A great complicity and collaboration between the artist and the model is essential to create a combination of effects.
The Shibari can also be used as a component in BDSM games and an enhancement in sexual activities.
The Shibari is characterized by the use of a purely artistic, aesthetic rope, whilst the kinbaku refers to the connective, sensual, sexual practice as a whole.
In Rome, a Kinbaku meeting has killed a young woman and his girlfriend is still in a coma. The Shibari is not to be taken lightly and must be supervised by professionals: it is, in fact, responsible for a thousand fatalities per year. /BONY_1430.11/Credit:BONY/SIPA/1501051451
DUKAS/SIPA -
DUKAS_46058188_SIP
Tie me up: The Art of Shibari or Kinbaku
The origin of the Shibari comes from Hojo-jutsu, the martial art of restraining captives, very practiced in Japan in the 1400s.
The Shibari,gradually recognized as a major art and aesthetics, has become a very popular art of bondage in Japan in the 1950's and shows up now in Europe.
The kinbaku is a type of Japanese sexual bondage for sadomasochistic games.
In the 1990s,the term " Shibari ", which is used in Japan to describe the art of tying packages , became the most popular name in the West. It refers to the art of bondage kinbaku. At first,the Kinbaku, equated to martial arts , Êis called "Hojojutsu". It is originally a method of torture, whose the technique differs depending on the rank of the prisoner. Then it turned into an erotic game and an art of erotic spirituality.
In the Shibari, the model is the canvas, the rope is the paint and brush, and the rigger is the rope artist. The positioning of knots in appropriate places stimulates pressure points on the body, very similarly to acupuncture techniques and Shiatsu.
The japanese bondage differs from western bondage because instead of immobilizing the subject and practicing certain constraints, the techniques of the shibari add to this basic concept an aesthetic point of view, even erotic, and the stimulation of energy centers at specific points of the body.
A great complicity and collaboration between the artist and the model is essential to create a combination of effects.
The Shibari can also be used as a component in BDSM games and an enhancement in sexual activities.
The Shibari is characterized by the use of a purely artistic, aesthetic rope, whilst the kinbaku refers to the connective, sensual, sexual practice as a whole.
In Rome, a Kinbaku meeting has killed a young woman and his girlfriend is still in a coma. The Shibari is not to be taken lightly and must be supervised by professionals: it is, in fact, responsible for a thousand fatalities per year. /BONY_1430.09/Credit:BONY/SIPA/1501051451
DUKAS/SIPA -
DUKAS_46057976_SIP
Tie me up: The Art of Shibari or Kinbaku
The origin of the Shibari comes from Hojo-jutsu, the martial art of restraining captives, very practiced in Japan in the 1400s.
The Shibari,gradually recognized as a major art and aesthetics, has become a very popular art of bondage in Japan in the 1950's and shows up now in Europe.
The kinbaku is a type of Japanese sexual bondage for sadomasochistic games.
In the 1990s,the term " Shibari ", which is used in Japan to describe the art of tying packages , became the most popular name in the West. It refers to the art of bondage kinbaku. At first,the Kinbaku, equated to martial arts , Êis called "Hojojutsu". It is originally a method of torture, whose the technique differs depending on the rank of the prisoner. Then it turned into an erotic game and an art of erotic spirituality.
In the Shibari, the model is the canvas, the rope is the paint and brush, and the rigger is the rope artist. The positioning of knots in appropriate places stimulates pressure points on the body, very similarly to acupuncture techniques and Shiatsu.
The japanese bondage differs from western bondage because instead of immobilizing the subject and practicing certain constraints, the techniques of the shibari add to this basic concept an aesthetic point of view, even erotic, and the stimulation of energy centers at specific points of the body.
A great complicity and collaboration between the artist and the model is essential to create a combination of effects.
The Shibari can also be used as a component in BDSM games and an enhancement in sexual activities.
The Shibari is characterized by the use of a purely artistic, aesthetic rope, whilst the kinbaku refers to the connective, sensual, sexual practice as a whole.
In Rome, a Kinbaku meeting has killed a young woman and his girlfriend is still in a coma. The Shibari is not to be taken lightly and must be supervised by professionals: it is, in fact, responsible for a thousand fatalities per year. /BONY_1430.26/Credit:BONY/SIPA/1501051451
DUKAS/SIPA -
DUKAS_46057973_SIP
Tie me up: The Art of Shibari or Kinbaku
The origin of the Shibari comes from Hojo-jutsu, the martial art of restraining captives, very practiced in Japan in the 1400s.
The Shibari,gradually recognized as a major art and aesthetics, has become a very popular art of bondage in Japan in the 1950's and shows up now in Europe.
The kinbaku is a type of Japanese sexual bondage for sadomasochistic games.
In the 1990s,the term " Shibari ", which is used in Japan to describe the art of tying packages , became the most popular name in the West. It refers to the art of bondage kinbaku. At first,the Kinbaku, equated to martial arts , Êis called "Hojojutsu". It is originally a method of torture, whose the technique differs depending on the rank of the prisoner. Then it turned into an erotic game and an art of erotic spirituality.
In the Shibari, the model is the canvas, the rope is the paint and brush, and the rigger is the rope artist. The positioning of knots in appropriate places stimulates pressure points on the body, very similarly to acupuncture techniques and Shiatsu.
The japanese bondage differs from western bondage because instead of immobilizing the subject and practicing certain constraints, the techniques of the shibari add to this basic concept an aesthetic point of view, even erotic, and the stimulation of energy centers at specific points of the body.
A great complicity and collaboration between the artist and the model is essential to create a combination of effects.
The Shibari can also be used as a component in BDSM games and an enhancement in sexual activities.
The Shibari is characterized by the use of a purely artistic, aesthetic rope, whilst the kinbaku refers to the connective, sensual, sexual practice as a whole.
In Rome, a Kinbaku meeting has killed a young woman and his girlfriend is still in a coma. The Shibari is not to be taken lightly and must be supervised by professionals: it is, in fact, responsible for a thousand fatalities per year. /BONY_1430.15/Credit:BONY/SIPA/1501051451
DUKAS/SIPA -
DUKAS_46057970_SIP
Tie me up: The Art of Shibari or Kinbaku
The origin of the Shibari comes from Hojo-jutsu, the martial art of restraining captives, very practiced in Japan in the 1400s.
The Shibari,gradually recognized as a major art and aesthetics, has become a very popular art of bondage in Japan in the 1950's and shows up now in Europe.
The kinbaku is a type of Japanese sexual bondage for sadomasochistic games.
In the 1990s,the term " Shibari ", which is used in Japan to describe the art of tying packages , became the most popular name in the West. It refers to the art of bondage kinbaku. At first,the Kinbaku, equated to martial arts , Êis called "Hojojutsu". It is originally a method of torture, whose the technique differs depending on the rank of the prisoner. Then it turned into an erotic game and an art of erotic spirituality.
In the Shibari, the model is the canvas, the rope is the paint and brush, and the rigger is the rope artist. The positioning of knots in appropriate places stimulates pressure points on the body, very similarly to acupuncture techniques and Shiatsu.
The japanese bondage differs from western bondage because instead of immobilizing the subject and practicing certain constraints, the techniques of the shibari add to this basic concept an aesthetic point of view, even erotic, and the stimulation of energy centers at specific points of the body.
A great complicity and collaboration between the artist and the model is essential to create a combination of effects.
The Shibari can also be used as a component in BDSM games and an enhancement in sexual activities.
The Shibari is characterized by the use of a purely artistic, aesthetic rope, whilst the kinbaku refers to the connective, sensual, sexual practice as a whole.
In Rome, a Kinbaku meeting has killed a young woman and his girlfriend is still in a coma. The Shibari is not to be taken lightly and must be supervised by professionals: it is, in fact, responsible for a thousand fatalities per year. /BONY_1430.02/Credit:BONY/SIPA/1501051451
DUKAS/SIPA -
DUKAS_46057930_SIP
Tie me up: The Art of Shibari or Kinbaku
The origin of the Shibari comes from Hojo-jutsu, the martial art of restraining captives, very practiced in Japan in the 1400s.
The Shibari,gradually recognized as a major art and aesthetics, has become a very popular art of bondage in Japan in the 1950's and shows up now in Europe.
The kinbaku is a type of Japanese sexual bondage for sadomasochistic games.
In the 1990s,the term " Shibari ", which is used in Japan to describe the art of tying packages , became the most popular name in the West. It refers to the art of bondage kinbaku. At first,the Kinbaku, equated to martial arts , Êis called "Hojojutsu". It is originally a method of torture, whose the technique differs depending on the rank of the prisoner. Then it turned into an erotic game and an art of erotic spirituality.
In the Shibari, the model is the canvas, the rope is the paint and brush, and the rigger is the rope artist. The positioning of knots in appropriate places stimulates pressure points on the body, very similarly to acupuncture techniques and Shiatsu.
The japanese bondage differs from western bondage because instead of immobilizing the subject and practicing certain constraints, the techniques of the shibari add to this basic concept an aesthetic point of view, even erotic, and the stimulation of energy centers at specific points of the body.
A great complicity and collaboration between the artist and the model is essential to create a combination of effects.
The Shibari can also be used as a component in BDSM games and an enhancement in sexual activities.
The Shibari is characterized by the use of a purely artistic, aesthetic rope, whilst the kinbaku refers to the connective, sensual, sexual practice as a whole.
In Rome, a Kinbaku meeting has killed a young woman and his girlfriend is still in a coma. The Shibari is not to be taken lightly and must be supervised by professionals: it is, in fact, responsible for a thousand fatalities per year. /BONY_1430.22/Credit:BONY/SIPA/1501051451
DUKAS/SIPA -
DUKAS_46057927_SIP
Tie me up: The Art of Shibari or Kinbaku
The origin of the Shibari comes from Hojo-jutsu, the martial art of restraining captives, very practiced in Japan in the 1400s.
The Shibari,gradually recognized as a major art and aesthetics, has become a very popular art of bondage in Japan in the 1950's and shows up now in Europe.
The kinbaku is a type of Japanese sexual bondage for sadomasochistic games.
In the 1990s,the term " Shibari ", which is used in Japan to describe the art of tying packages , became the most popular name in the West. It refers to the art of bondage kinbaku. At first,the Kinbaku, equated to martial arts , Êis called "Hojojutsu". It is originally a method of torture, whose the technique differs depending on the rank of the prisoner. Then it turned into an erotic game and an art of erotic spirituality.
In the Shibari, the model is the canvas, the rope is the paint and brush, and the rigger is the rope artist. The positioning of knots in appropriate places stimulates pressure points on the body, very similarly to acupuncture techniques and Shiatsu.
The japanese bondage differs from western bondage because instead of immobilizing the subject and practicing certain constraints, the techniques of the shibari add to this basic concept an aesthetic point of view, even erotic, and the stimulation of energy centers at specific points of the body.
A great complicity and collaboration between the artist and the model is essential to create a combination of effects.
The Shibari can also be used as a component in BDSM games and an enhancement in sexual activities.
The Shibari is characterized by the use of a purely artistic, aesthetic rope, whilst the kinbaku refers to the connective, sensual, sexual practice as a whole.
In Rome, a Kinbaku meeting has killed a young woman and his girlfriend is still in a coma. The Shibari is not to be taken lightly and must be supervised by professionals: it is, in fact, responsible for a thousand fatalities per year. /BONY_1430.20/Credit:BONY/SIPA/1501051451
DUKAS/SIPA -
DUKAS_46057923_SIP
Tie me up: The Art of Shibari or Kinbaku
The origin of the Shibari comes from Hojo-jutsu, the martial art of restraining captives, very practiced in Japan in the 1400s.
The Shibari,gradually recognized as a major art and aesthetics, has become a very popular art of bondage in Japan in the 1950's and shows up now in Europe.
The kinbaku is a type of Japanese sexual bondage for sadomasochistic games.
In the 1990s,the term " Shibari ", which is used in Japan to describe the art of tying packages , became the most popular name in the West. It refers to the art of bondage kinbaku. At first,the Kinbaku, equated to martial arts , Êis called "Hojojutsu". It is originally a method of torture, whose the technique differs depending on the rank of the prisoner. Then it turned into an erotic game and an art of erotic spirituality.
In the Shibari, the model is the canvas, the rope is the paint and brush, and the rigger is the rope artist. The positioning of knots in appropriate places stimulates pressure points on the body, very similarly to acupuncture techniques and Shiatsu.
The japanese bondage differs from western bondage because instead of immobilizing the subject and practicing certain constraints, the techniques of the shibari add to this basic concept an aesthetic point of view, even erotic, and the stimulation of energy centers at specific points of the body.
A great complicity and collaboration between the artist and the model is essential to create a combination of effects.
The Shibari can also be used as a component in BDSM games and an enhancement in sexual activities.
The Shibari is characterized by the use of a purely artistic, aesthetic rope, whilst the kinbaku refers to the connective, sensual, sexual practice as a whole.
In Rome, a Kinbaku meeting has killed a young woman and his girlfriend is still in a coma. The Shibari is not to be taken lightly and must be supervised by professionals: it is, in fact, responsible for a thousand fatalities per year. /BONY_1430.17/Credit:BONY/SIPA/1501051451
DUKAS/SIPA -
DUKAS_46057915_SIP
Tie me up: The Art of Shibari or Kinbaku
The origin of the Shibari comes from Hojo-jutsu, the martial art of restraining captives, very practiced in Japan in the 1400s.
The Shibari,gradually recognized as a major art and aesthetics, has become a very popular art of bondage in Japan in the 1950's and shows up now in Europe.
The kinbaku is a type of Japanese sexual bondage for sadomasochistic games.
In the 1990s,the term " Shibari ", which is used in Japan to describe the art of tying packages , became the most popular name in the West. It refers to the art of bondage kinbaku. At first,the Kinbaku, equated to martial arts , Êis called "Hojojutsu". It is originally a method of torture, whose the technique differs depending on the rank of the prisoner. Then it turned into an erotic game and an art of erotic spirituality.
In the Shibari, the model is the canvas, the rope is the paint and brush, and the rigger is the rope artist. The positioning of knots in appropriate places stimulates pressure points on the body, very similarly to acupuncture techniques and Shiatsu.
The japanese bondage differs from western bondage because instead of immobilizing the subject and practicing certain constraints, the techniques of the shibari add to this basic concept an aesthetic point of view, even erotic, and the stimulation of energy centers at specific points of the body.
A great complicity and collaboration between the artist and the model is essential to create a combination of effects.
The Shibari can also be used as a component in BDSM games and an enhancement in sexual activities.
The Shibari is characterized by the use of a purely artistic, aesthetic rope, whilst the kinbaku refers to the connective, sensual, sexual practice as a whole.
In Rome, a Kinbaku meeting has killed a young woman and his girlfriend is still in a coma. The Shibari is not to be taken lightly and must be supervised by professionals: it is, in fact, responsible for a thousand fatalities per year. /BONY_1430.06/Credit:BONY/SIPA/1501051451
DUKAS/SIPA -
DUKAS_46057914_SIP
Tie me up: The Art of Shibari or Kinbaku
The origin of the Shibari comes from Hojo-jutsu, the martial art of restraining captives, very practiced in Japan in the 1400s.
The Shibari,gradually recognized as a major art and aesthetics, has become a very popular art of bondage in Japan in the 1950's and shows up now in Europe.
The kinbaku is a type of Japanese sexual bondage for sadomasochistic games.
In the 1990s,the term " Shibari ", which is used in Japan to describe the art of tying packages , became the most popular name in the West. It refers to the art of bondage kinbaku. At first,the Kinbaku, equated to martial arts , Êis called "Hojojutsu". It is originally a method of torture, whose the technique differs depending on the rank of the prisoner. Then it turned into an erotic game and an art of erotic spirituality.
In the Shibari, the model is the canvas, the rope is the paint and brush, and the rigger is the rope artist. The positioning of knots in appropriate places stimulates pressure points on the body, very similarly to acupuncture techniques and Shiatsu.
The japanese bondage differs from western bondage because instead of immobilizing the subject and practicing certain constraints, the techniques of the shibari add to this basic concept an aesthetic point of view, even erotic, and the stimulation of energy centers at specific points of the body.
A great complicity and collaboration between the artist and the model is essential to create a combination of effects.
The Shibari can also be used as a component in BDSM games and an enhancement in sexual activities.
The Shibari is characterized by the use of a purely artistic, aesthetic rope, whilst the kinbaku refers to the connective, sensual, sexual practice as a whole.
In Rome, a Kinbaku meeting has killed a young woman and his girlfriend is still in a coma. The Shibari is not to be taken lightly and must be supervised by professionals: it is, in fact, responsible for a thousand fatalities per year. /BONY_1430.05/Credit:BONY/SIPA/1501051451
DUKAS/SIPA -
DUKAS_46057886_SIP
Tie me up: The Art of Shibari or Kinbaku
The origin of the Shibari comes from Hojo-jutsu, the martial art of restraining captives, very practiced in Japan in the 1400s.
The Shibari,gradually recognized as a major art and aesthetics, has become a very popular art of bondage in Japan in the 1950's and shows up now in Europe.
The kinbaku is a type of Japanese sexual bondage for sadomasochistic games.
In the 1990s,the term " Shibari ", which is used in Japan to describe the art of tying packages , became the most popular name in the West. It refers to the art of bondage kinbaku. At first,the Kinbaku, equated to martial arts , Êis called "Hojojutsu". It is originally a method of torture, whose the technique differs depending on the rank of the prisoner. Then it turned into an erotic game and an art of erotic spirituality.
In the Shibari, the model is the canvas, the rope is the paint and brush, and the rigger is the rope artist. The positioning of knots in appropriate places stimulates pressure points on the body, very similarly to acupuncture techniques and Shiatsu.
The japanese bondage differs from western bondage because instead of immobilizing the subject and practicing certain constraints, the techniques of the shibari add to this basic concept an aesthetic point of view, even erotic, and the stimulation of energy centers at specific points of the body.
A great complicity and collaboration between the artist and the model is essential to create a combination of effects.
The Shibari can also be used as a component in BDSM games and an enhancement in sexual activities.
The Shibari is characterized by the use of a purely artistic, aesthetic rope, whilst the kinbaku refers to the connective, sensual, sexual practice as a whole.
In Rome, a Kinbaku meeting has killed a young woman and his girlfriend is still in a coma. The Shibari is not to be taken lightly and must be supervised by professionals: it is, in fact, responsible for a thousand fatalities per year. /BONY_1430.24/Credit:BONY/SIPA/1501051451
DUKAS/SIPA -
DUKAS_46057878_SIP
Tie me up: The Art of Shibari or Kinbaku
The origin of the Shibari comes from Hojo-jutsu, the martial art of restraining captives, very practiced in Japan in the 1400s.
The Shibari,gradually recognized as a major art and aesthetics, has become a very popular art of bondage in Japan in the 1950's and shows up now in Europe.
The kinbaku is a type of Japanese sexual bondage for sadomasochistic games.
In the 1990s,the term " Shibari ", which is used in Japan to describe the art of tying packages , became the most popular name in the West. It refers to the art of bondage kinbaku. At first,the Kinbaku, equated to martial arts , Êis called "Hojojutsu". It is originally a method of torture, whose the technique differs depending on the rank of the prisoner. Then it turned into an erotic game and an art of erotic spirituality.
In the Shibari, the model is the canvas, the rope is the paint and brush, and the rigger is the rope artist. The positioning of knots in appropriate places stimulates pressure points on the body, very similarly to acupuncture techniques and Shiatsu.
The japanese bondage differs from western bondage because instead of immobilizing the subject and practicing certain constraints, the techniques of the shibari add to this basic concept an aesthetic point of view, even erotic, and the stimulation of energy centers at specific points of the body.
A great complicity and collaboration between the artist and the model is essential to create a combination of effects.
The Shibari can also be used as a component in BDSM games and an enhancement in sexual activities.
The Shibari is characterized by the use of a purely artistic, aesthetic rope, whilst the kinbaku refers to the connective, sensual, sexual practice as a whole.
In Rome, a Kinbaku meeting has killed a young woman and his girlfriend is still in a coma. The Shibari is not to be taken lightly and must be supervised by professionals: it is, in fact, responsible for a thousand fatalities per year. /BONY_1430.38/Credit:BONY/SIPA/1501051451
DUKAS/SIPA -
DUKAS_46057869_SIP
Tie me up: The Art of Shibari or Kinbaku
The origin of the Shibari comes from Hojo-jutsu, the martial art of restraining captives, very practiced in Japan in the 1400s.
The Shibari,gradually recognized as a major art and aesthetics, has become a very popular art of bondage in Japan in the 1950's and shows up now in Europe.
The kinbaku is a type of Japanese sexual bondage for sadomasochistic games.
In the 1990s,the term " Shibari ", which is used in Japan to describe the art of tying packages , became the most popular name in the West. It refers to the art of bondage kinbaku. At first,the Kinbaku, equated to martial arts , Êis called "Hojojutsu". It is originally a method of torture, whose the technique differs depending on the rank of the prisoner. Then it turned into an erotic game and an art of erotic spirituality.
In the Shibari, the model is the canvas, the rope is the paint and brush, and the rigger is the rope artist. The positioning of knots in appropriate places stimulates pressure points on the body, very similarly to acupuncture techniques and Shiatsu.
The japanese bondage differs from western bondage because instead of immobilizing the subject and practicing certain constraints, the techniques of the shibari add to this basic concept an aesthetic point of view, even erotic, and the stimulation of energy centers at specific points of the body.
A great complicity and collaboration between the artist and the model is essential to create a combination of effects.
The Shibari can also be used as a component in BDSM games and an enhancement in sexual activities.
The Shibari is characterized by the use of a purely artistic, aesthetic rope, whilst the kinbaku refers to the connective, sensual, sexual practice as a whole.
In Rome, a Kinbaku meeting has killed a young woman and his girlfriend is still in a coma. The Shibari is not to be taken lightly and must be supervised by professionals: it is, in fact, responsible for a thousand fatalities per year. /BONY_1430.08/Credit:BONY/SIPA/1501051451
DUKAS/SIPA -
DUKAS_46057866_SIP
Tie me up: The Art of Shibari or Kinbaku
The origin of the Shibari comes from Hojo-jutsu, the martial art of restraining captives, very practiced in Japan in the 1400s.
The Shibari,gradually recognized as a major art and aesthetics, has become a very popular art of bondage in Japan in the 1950's and shows up now in Europe.
The kinbaku is a type of Japanese sexual bondage for sadomasochistic games.
In the 1990s,the term " Shibari ", which is used in Japan to describe the art of tying packages , became the most popular name in the West. It refers to the art of bondage kinbaku. At first,the Kinbaku, equated to martial arts , Êis called "Hojojutsu". It is originally a method of torture, whose the technique differs depending on the rank of the prisoner. Then it turned into an erotic game and an art of erotic spirituality.
In the Shibari, the model is the canvas, the rope is the paint and brush, and the rigger is the rope artist. The positioning of knots in appropriate places stimulates pressure points on the body, very similarly to acupuncture techniques and Shiatsu.
The japanese bondage differs from western bondage because instead of immobilizing the subject and practicing certain constraints, the techniques of the shibari add to this basic concept an aesthetic point of view, even erotic, and the stimulation of energy centers at specific points of the body.
A great complicity and collaboration between the artist and the model is essential to create a combination of effects.
The Shibari can also be used as a component in BDSM games and an enhancement in sexual activities.
The Shibari is characterized by the use of a purely artistic, aesthetic rope, whilst the kinbaku refers to the connective, sensual, sexual practice as a whole.
In Rome, a Kinbaku meeting has killed a young woman and his girlfriend is still in a coma. The Shibari is not to be taken lightly and must be supervised by professionals: it is, in fact, responsible for a thousand fatalities per year. /BONY_1430.34/Credit:BONY/SIPA/1501051451
DUKAS/SIPA -
DUKAS_46057855_SIP
Tie me up: The Art of Shibari or Kinbaku
The origin of the Shibari comes from Hojo-jutsu, the martial art of restraining captives, very practiced in Japan in the 1400s.
The Shibari,gradually recognized as a major art and aesthetics, has become a very popular art of bondage in Japan in the 1950's and shows up now in Europe.
The kinbaku is a type of Japanese sexual bondage for sadomasochistic games.
In the 1990s,the term " Shibari ", which is used in Japan to describe the art of tying packages , became the most popular name in the West. It refers to the art of bondage kinbaku. At first,the Kinbaku, equated to martial arts , Êis called "Hojojutsu". It is originally a method of torture, whose the technique differs depending on the rank of the prisoner. Then it turned into an erotic game and an art of erotic spirituality.
In the Shibari, the model is the canvas, the rope is the paint and brush, and the rigger is the rope artist. The positioning of knots in appropriate places stimulates pressure points on the body, very similarly to acupuncture techniques and Shiatsu.
The japanese bondage differs from western bondage because instead of immobilizing the subject and practicing certain constraints, the techniques of the shibari add to this basic concept an aesthetic point of view, even erotic, and the stimulation of energy centers at specific points of the body.
A great complicity and collaboration between the artist and the model is essential to create a combination of effects.
The Shibari can also be used as a component in BDSM games and an enhancement in sexual activities.
The Shibari is characterized by the use of a purely artistic, aesthetic rope, whilst the kinbaku refers to the connective, sensual, sexual practice as a whole.
In Rome, a Kinbaku meeting has killed a young woman and his girlfriend is still in a coma. The Shibari is not to be taken lightly and must be supervised by professionals: it is, in fact, responsible for a thousand fatalities per year. /BONY_1430.36/Credit:BONY/SIPA/1501051451
DUKAS/SIPA -
DUKAS_46057853_SIP
Tie me up: The Art of Shibari or Kinbaku
The origin of the Shibari comes from Hojo-jutsu, the martial art of restraining captives, very practiced in Japan in the 1400s.
The Shibari,gradually recognized as a major art and aesthetics, has become a very popular art of bondage in Japan in the 1950's and shows up now in Europe.
The kinbaku is a type of Japanese sexual bondage for sadomasochistic games.
In the 1990s,the term " Shibari ", which is used in Japan to describe the art of tying packages , became the most popular name in the West. It refers to the art of bondage kinbaku. At first,the Kinbaku, equated to martial arts , Êis called "Hojojutsu". It is originally a method of torture, whose the technique differs depending on the rank of the prisoner. Then it turned into an erotic game and an art of erotic spirituality.
In the Shibari, the model is the canvas, the rope is the paint and brush, and the rigger is the rope artist. The positioning of knots in appropriate places stimulates pressure points on the body, very similarly to acupuncture techniques and Shiatsu.
The japanese bondage differs from western bondage because instead of immobilizing the subject and practicing certain constraints, the techniques of the shibari add to this basic concept an aesthetic point of view, even erotic, and the stimulation of energy centers at specific points of the body.
A great complicity and collaboration between the artist and the model is essential to create a combination of effects.
The Shibari can also be used as a component in BDSM games and an enhancement in sexual activities.
The Shibari is characterized by the use of a purely artistic, aesthetic rope, whilst the kinbaku refers to the connective, sensual, sexual practice as a whole.
In Rome, a Kinbaku meeting has killed a young woman and his girlfriend is still in a coma. The Shibari is not to be taken lightly and must be supervised by professionals: it is, in fact, responsible for a thousand fatalities per year. /BONY_1430.39/Credit:BONY/SIPA/1501051451
DUKAS/SIPA -
DUKAS_46057852_SIP
Tie me up: The Art of Shibari or Kinbaku
The origin of the Shibari comes from Hojo-jutsu, the martial art of restraining captives, very practiced in Japan in the 1400s.
The Shibari,gradually recognized as a major art and aesthetics, has become a very popular art of bondage in Japan in the 1950's and shows up now in Europe.
The kinbaku is a type of Japanese sexual bondage for sadomasochistic games.
In the 1990s,the term " Shibari ", which is used in Japan to describe the art of tying packages , became the most popular name in the West. It refers to the art of bondage kinbaku. At first,the Kinbaku, equated to martial arts , Êis called "Hojojutsu". It is originally a method of torture, whose the technique differs depending on the rank of the prisoner. Then it turned into an erotic game and an art of erotic spirituality.
In the Shibari, the model is the canvas, the rope is the paint and brush, and the rigger is the rope artist. The positioning of knots in appropriate places stimulates pressure points on the body, very similarly to acupuncture techniques and Shiatsu.
The japanese bondage differs from western bondage because instead of immobilizing the subject and practicing certain constraints, the techniques of the shibari add to this basic concept an aesthetic point of view, even erotic, and the stimulation of energy centers at specific points of the body.
A great complicity and collaboration between the artist and the model is essential to create a combination of effects.
The Shibari can also be used as a component in BDSM games and an enhancement in sexual activities.
The Shibari is characterized by the use of a purely artistic, aesthetic rope, whilst the kinbaku refers to the connective, sensual, sexual practice as a whole.
In Rome, a Kinbaku meeting has killed a young woman and his girlfriend is still in a coma. The Shibari is not to be taken lightly and must be supervised by professionals: it is, in fact, responsible for a thousand fatalities per year. /BONY_1430.29/Credit:BONY/SIPA/1501051451
DUKAS/SIPA -
DUKAS_46057850_SIP
Tie me up: The Art of Shibari or Kinbaku
The origin of the Shibari comes from Hojo-jutsu, the martial art of restraining captives, very practiced in Japan in the 1400s.
The Shibari,gradually recognized as a major art and aesthetics, has become a very popular art of bondage in Japan in the 1950's and shows up now in Europe.
The kinbaku is a type of Japanese sexual bondage for sadomasochistic games.
In the 1990s,the term " Shibari ", which is used in Japan to describe the art of tying packages , became the most popular name in the West. It refers to the art of bondage kinbaku. At first,the Kinbaku, equated to martial arts , Êis called "Hojojutsu". It is originally a method of torture, whose the technique differs depending on the rank of the prisoner. Then it turned into an erotic game and an art of erotic spirituality.
In the Shibari, the model is the canvas, the rope is the paint and brush, and the rigger is the rope artist. The positioning of knots in appropriate places stimulates pressure points on the body, very similarly to acupuncture techniques and Shiatsu.
The japanese bondage differs from western bondage because instead of immobilizing the subject and practicing certain constraints, the techniques of the shibari add to this basic concept an aesthetic point of view, even erotic, and the stimulation of energy centers at specific points of the body.
A great complicity and collaboration between the artist and the model is essential to create a combination of effects.
The Shibari can also be used as a component in BDSM games and an enhancement in sexual activities.
The Shibari is characterized by the use of a purely artistic, aesthetic rope, whilst the kinbaku refers to the connective, sensual, sexual practice as a whole.
In Rome, a Kinbaku meeting has killed a young woman and his girlfriend is still in a coma. The Shibari is not to be taken lightly and must be supervised by professionals: it is, in fact, responsible for a thousand fatalities per year. /BONY_1430.19/Credit:BONY/SIPA/1501051451
DUKAS/SIPA -
DUKAS_46057849_SIP
Tie me up: The Art of Shibari or Kinbaku
The origin of the Shibari comes from Hojo-jutsu, the martial art of restraining captives, very practiced in Japan in the 1400s.
The Shibari,gradually recognized as a major art and aesthetics, has become a very popular art of bondage in Japan in the 1950's and shows up now in Europe.
The kinbaku is a type of Japanese sexual bondage for sadomasochistic games.
In the 1990s,the term " Shibari ", which is used in Japan to describe the art of tying packages , became the most popular name in the West. It refers to the art of bondage kinbaku. At first,the Kinbaku, equated to martial arts , Êis called "Hojojutsu". It is originally a method of torture, whose the technique differs depending on the rank of the prisoner. Then it turned into an erotic game and an art of erotic spirituality.
In the Shibari, the model is the canvas, the rope is the paint and brush, and the rigger is the rope artist. The positioning of knots in appropriate places stimulates pressure points on the body, very similarly to acupuncture techniques and Shiatsu.
The japanese bondage differs from western bondage because instead of immobilizing the subject and practicing certain constraints, the techniques of the shibari add to this basic concept an aesthetic point of view, even erotic, and the stimulation of energy centers at specific points of the body.
A great complicity and collaboration between the artist and the model is essential to create a combination of effects.
The Shibari can also be used as a component in BDSM games and an enhancement in sexual activities.
The Shibari is characterized by the use of a purely artistic, aesthetic rope, whilst the kinbaku refers to the connective, sensual, sexual practice as a whole.
In Rome, a Kinbaku meeting has killed a young woman and his girlfriend is still in a coma. The Shibari is not to be taken lightly and must be supervised by professionals: it is, in fact, responsible for a thousand fatalities per year. /BONY_1430.21/Credit:BONY/SIPA/1501051451
DUKAS/SIPA -
DUKAS_46057982_SIP
Tie me up: The Art of Shibari or Kinbaku
The origin of the Shibari comes from Hojo-jutsu, the martial art of restraining captives, very practiced in Japan in the 1400s.
The Shibari,gradually recognized as a major art and aesthetics, has become a very popular art of bondage in Japan in the 1950's and shows up now in Europe.
The kinbaku is a type of Japanese sexual bondage for sadomasochistic games.
In the 1990s,the term " Shibari ", which is used in Japan to describe the art of tying packages , became the most popular name in the West. It refers to the art of bondage kinbaku. At first,the Kinbaku, equated to martial arts , Êis called "Hojojutsu". It is originally a method of torture, whose the technique differs depending on the rank of the prisoner. Then it turned into an erotic game and an art of erotic spirituality.
In the Shibari, the model is the canvas, the rope is the paint and brush, and the rigger is the rope artist. The positioning of knots in appropriate places stimulates pressure points on the body, very similarly to acupuncture techniques and Shiatsu.
The japanese bondage differs from western bondage because instead of immobilizing the subject and practicing certain constraints, the techniques of the shibari add to this basic concept an aesthetic point of view, even erotic, and the stimulation of energy centers at specific points of the body.
A great complicity and collaboration between the artist and the model is essential to create a combination of effects.
The Shibari can also be used as a component in BDSM games and an enhancement in sexual activities.
The Shibari is characterized by the use of a purely artistic, aesthetic rope, whilst the kinbaku refers to the connective, sensual, sexual practice as a whole.
In Rome, a Kinbaku meeting has killed a young woman and his girlfriend is still in a coma. The Shibari is not to be taken lightly and must be supervised by professionals: it is, in fact, responsible for a thousand fatalities per year. /BONY_1430.30/Credit:BONY/SIPA/1501051451
DUKAS/SIPA -
DUKAS_46057975_SIP
Tie me up: The Art of Shibari or Kinbaku
The origin of the Shibari comes from Hojo-jutsu, the martial art of restraining captives, very practiced in Japan in the 1400s.
The Shibari,gradually recognized as a major art and aesthetics, has become a very popular art of bondage in Japan in the 1950's and shows up now in Europe.
The kinbaku is a type of Japanese sexual bondage for sadomasochistic games.
In the 1990s,the term " Shibari ", which is used in Japan to describe the art of tying packages , became the most popular name in the West. It refers to the art of bondage kinbaku. At first,the Kinbaku, equated to martial arts , Êis called "Hojojutsu". It is originally a method of torture, whose the technique differs depending on the rank of the prisoner. Then it turned into an erotic game and an art of erotic spirituality.
In the Shibari, the model is the canvas, the rope is the paint and brush, and the rigger is the rope artist. The positioning of knots in appropriate places stimulates pressure points on the body, very similarly to acupuncture techniques and Shiatsu.
The japanese bondage differs from western bondage because instead of immobilizing the subject and practicing certain constraints, the techniques of the shibari add to this basic concept an aesthetic point of view, even erotic, and the stimulation of energy centers at specific points of the body.
A great complicity and collaboration between the artist and the model is essential to create a combination of effects.
The Shibari can also be used as a component in BDSM games and an enhancement in sexual activities.
The Shibari is characterized by the use of a purely artistic, aesthetic rope, whilst the kinbaku refers to the connective, sensual, sexual practice as a whole.
In Rome, a Kinbaku meeting has killed a young woman and his girlfriend is still in a coma. The Shibari is not to be taken lightly and must be supervised by professionals: it is, in fact, responsible for a thousand fatalities per year. /BONY_1430.04/Credit:BONY/SIPA/1501051451
DUKAS/SIPA -
DUKAS_46057972_SIP
Tie me up: The Art of Shibari or Kinbaku
The origin of the Shibari comes from Hojo-jutsu, the martial art of restraining captives, very practiced in Japan in the 1400s.
The Shibari,gradually recognized as a major art and aesthetics, has become a very popular art of bondage in Japan in the 1950's and shows up now in Europe.
The kinbaku is a type of Japanese sexual bondage for sadomasochistic games.
In the 1990s,the term " Shibari ", which is used in Japan to describe the art of tying packages , became the most popular name in the West. It refers to the art of bondage kinbaku. At first,the Kinbaku, equated to martial arts , Êis called "Hojojutsu". It is originally a method of torture, whose the technique differs depending on the rank of the prisoner. Then it turned into an erotic game and an art of erotic spirituality.
In the Shibari, the model is the canvas, the rope is the paint and brush, and the rigger is the rope artist. The positioning of knots in appropriate places stimulates pressure points on the body, very similarly to acupuncture techniques and Shiatsu.
The japanese bondage differs from western bondage because instead of immobilizing the subject and practicing certain constraints, the techniques of the shibari add to this basic concept an aesthetic point of view, even erotic, and the stimulation of energy centers at specific points of the body.
A great complicity and collaboration between the artist and the model is essential to create a combination of effects.
The Shibari can also be used as a component in BDSM games and an enhancement in sexual activities.
The Shibari is characterized by the use of a purely artistic, aesthetic rope, whilst the kinbaku refers to the connective, sensual, sexual practice as a whole.
In Rome, a Kinbaku meeting has killed a young woman and his girlfriend is still in a coma. The Shibari is not to be taken lightly and must be supervised by professionals: it is, in fact, responsible for a thousand fatalities per year. /BONY_1430.01/Credit:BONY/SIPA/1501051451
DUKAS/SIPA -
DUKAS_31494905_POL
Bondage and sado-masochism dungeon in Melbourne
Bondage room at The Dominas Realm - a house of bondage and sado-masochism that caters to those with slave, submission dominance and cross dressing fetishes, 182 Rose Street, Fitzroy, Tuesday, Oct 20, 2009. The Dominas Realm has five rooms/dungeons for hire and roster of mistresses, masters and submissives. ///
Bondage and sado-masochism dungeon in Melbourne
DUKAS/POLARIS -
DUKAS_31494896_POL
Bondage and sado-masochism dungeon in Melbourne
The Dominas Realm - a house of bondage and sado-masochism that caters to those with slave, submission dominance and cross dressing fetishes, 182 Rose Street, Fitzroy, Tuesday, Oct 20, 2009. The Dominas Realm has five rooms/dungeons for hire and roster of mistresses, masters and submissives. ///
Bondage and sado-masochism dungeon in Melbourne
DUKAS/POLARIS -
DUKAS_31494887_POL
Bondage and sado-masochism dungeon in Melbourne
Bondage equipment in the 'suspension room' at The Dominas Realm - a house of bondage and sado-masochism that caters to those with slave, submission dominance and cross dressing fetishes, 182 Rose Street, Fitzroy, Tuesday, Oct 20, 2009. The Dominas Realm has five rooms/dungeons for hire and roster of mistresses, masters and submissives. ///
Bondage and sado-masochism dungeon in Melbourne
DUKAS/POLARIS -
DUKAS_31494842_POL
Bondage and Sado Masochism thriving in Sydney
December 7, 2011, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia: December 7, 2011 - Sydney, Australia: 'The Red Room' a bondage dungeon at Sydney bondage and sado masochism establishment, Salon Kitty's. Salon Kitty's has been a fixture on the Sydney BDSM scene for 25 years. (Dave Tacon / Polaris). ///
DUKAS/POLARIS -
DUKAS_31494883_POL
Bondage and Sado Masochism thriving in Sydney
December 6, 2011, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia: December 6, 2011 - Sydney, Australia: Mistress Scarlett attends to a client with submissive fetishes at Sydney bondage and sado masochism establishment, The Kastle. The Kastle has been a fixture on the Sydney BDSM scene for around 30 years. (Dave Tacon / Polaris). ///
DUKAS/POLARIS -
DUKAS_31494879_POL
Bondage and Sado Masochism thriving in Sydney
December 6, 2011, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia: December 6, 2011 - Sydney, Australia: Mistress Scarlett attends to a client with submissive fetishes at Sydney bondage and sado masochism establishment, The Kastle. The Kastle has been a fixture on the Sydney BDSM scene for around 30 years. (Dave Tacon / Polaris). ///
DUKAS/POLARIS