If this is the wrong forum for this post then mods please feel free to move it to the non-WAM forum.
This was an idea I had after seeing a few adverts recently. What I'm interested in is if you see pictures that aren't really anything to do with WAM but still seem suggestive enough to you as a Wammer to have a distinct WAM connection.
Here are a couple of examples... one is a hair dye treatment in progress, but to me just looks like lovely messy hair. The other is a set of novelty women's PJ's for Halloween, and you'll see the joke, but the fact that it has "pie" written right on the crotch area seems like a very clear instruction to follow to me.... inviting you to place a pie right there!!
Do you have any pictures like this that are oh so suggestive of WAM even if not intended that way by the content creator?
Does Kim Kardashian's break the internet picture count? With the wine spilling onto the dress. I know it's a sparkly dress but but someone thinking differently could definitely think that the dress is soaked with wine.
Nice thread. The first thing that came to mind was the series of "Got Milk?" ads. The second that popped into my head was images of women eating chocolate, sometimes with a devilish look on their faces.
Here's another example... This video of military training. Heaven knows what they're trying to achieve, as it looks tactically unsound... are they looking for something in the mud? Whatever it is, can I go in there after them for a play?
I have a new offering. Bella Hadid had a dress spray painted on her for Paris fashion week. How? "The dress was made from Fabrican, a sprayable fabric invented in 2003 that hardens into clothing. According to the company's website, founder Manel Torres "imagined a material that would magically fit the body like a second skin yet have the appearance of clothing."
anymess said: I have a new offering. Bella Hadid had a dress spray painted on her for Paris fashion week. How? "The dress was made from Fabrican, a sprayable fabric invented in 2003 that hardens into clothing. According to the company's website, founder Manel Torres "imagined a material that would magically fit the body like a second skin yet have the appearance of clothing."