This scene needs very little description its pure messy clay fun!
Cinq has been soaking 10kg of red clay for a good two weeks using her hands to break it up and then used a hand blender to get it totally smooth and lump free. Wearing a sexy Japanese sailor out fit with a navy pleated skirt, a white top with cute sailor collar and a navy bow. She is wearing shiny tights and no panties. Enjoy this scene Cinq sure did!
DungeonMasterOne said: Wow, that looks fantastic. Added to my purchase list.
Did the outfit survive?
Thank you DM1 unfortunately the outfit was binned I didn't want to allow too much of the clay through the drains and risk damage to the washing machine. The particles were very fine however so the clay on me washed away fairly easily as they really did disperse in water with no heaviness so I think the drains are OK
DungeonMasterOne said: Wow, that looks fantastic. Added to my purchase list.
Did the outfit survive?
Thank you DM1 unfortunately the outfit was binned I didn't want to allow too much of the clay through the drains and risk damage to the washing machine. The particles were very fine however so the clay on me washed away fairly easily as they really did disperse in water with no heaviness so I think the drains are OK
Fair enough. And understood re clay blocking things, when I do a washing of mud clothes after a scene I let the machine fill to it's standard level, and then when the valves close I stick the dungeon hose in the powder drawer and open the cold tap all the way, and keep it filling till the water level in the drum is half way up the glass door. I figure more water to mix with means less likelyhood of the clay heavily precipitating out and settling in the drain, clogging it before the first pump run. This is during the initial cold rinse, where the machine fills and empties several times, I'll add the extra fill at least twice in this cycle and then again for at least the first and possibly second 40 degree wash. For a mud scene we usually do one rinse cycle and two or three 40 degree cycles, with the spin turned off for all but the last cycle to avoid unnecessary strain on the machine. It's impressive just how much mud will come back with us from a mud shoot in denim overalls or boilersuits, and even running pants can absorb a fair bit.
Btw, re the "answer lots of quotes in one post", here's how I do it:
1. Hit reply to the first reply, click the mouse inside the text box (that's important), Ctrl-A to select all the text, Ctrl-X (or Ctrl-C) to copy it to the clipboard. 2. Click the browser "Back" button, down to the next reply to be quoted, click Reply, click the mouse in the text box, then press "Ctrl-Home", which moves the cursor to the top left of the text box. Press Ctrl-V to paste in the previously copied text. You now have the first and second replies above each other in the box. 3. Ctrl-A to select all, Ctrl-X or Ctrl-C to copy it to the clipboard.
Now repeat steps 2 and 3 as many times as there are posts you want to reply to, and skipping Step 3 for the final one. By the end of it you should have a text box that contains:
(quote) First person said: nice outfit! (/quote)
(quote) Second person said: great scene! (/quote)
(quote) Thirs person said: cool photos! (/quote)
Reply to each one in the blank line between the closing (/quote) of one post and the opening (quote) of the next one. I try and add a blank line under my replies so as to space things out, thus:
(quote) First person said: nice outfit! (/quote) Thanks, we took great care choosing that one.
(quote) Second person said: great scene! (/quote) Glad you liked it!
(quote) Thirs person said: cool photos! (/quote) Thanks, we shot these on a brand new camera.
I'm gonna have to practice this quote thing ! Thanks for the help.
Our washing machine is in the shed and the waste pipe has to travel about 5 meters to the main waste pipe in the middle of the hard standing and apparently we have a sess pit which is probably now full of gunge, beans,hoops and feathers we may have to move before they find that haha !