#891 - Girls Figure Training Academy Eric Stanton Baroness Steel Jim
Girls’ Figure Training Academy
Eric Stanton
First published as photo prints by Irving Klaw in 1957
Published in Bizarre Comix, volume 23
by Bélier Press, Inc.
1978
optimized for ebook viewing
Baroness Steel
Jim
First published as photo prints by Irving Klaw in 1954
Published in Bizarre Comix, volume 5
by Bélier Press, Inc., 1976
optimized for ebook viewing
Captives in Distress
Adolfo Ruiz
First published as photo prints by Irving Klaw in 1958
Published in Bizarre Comix, volume 4
by Bélier Press, Inc., 1976
optimized for ebook viewing
historical note
Photo printing required the original artwork to be photographed and enlargements of negatives “printed” on photographic paper. Because of the imprecision of chemicals and temperatures, many sets of photo prints had light and dark regions and other undesirable properties.
Mr. Klaw sold these by mail in the 1950s. To avoid conflicts with post office authorities, his pictures, generally, showed no nudity, sexual activity or male characters.
He began publishing Nutrix booklet series after he moved to New Jersey in 1959. The Nutrix volumes were usually limited to 64 small pages, including the covers. Fitting a comic serial in a Nutrix booklet usually resulted in pictures being trimmed, divided in two and, about half the time, omitted. Despite their defects, the photo prints were complete sets.
The Bizarre Comix / Bélier Press editions used as source material for 30th Street Graphics ebooks are based on the photo prints and are complete comic serials.
Girls’ Figure Training Academy – 22 episodes
Eric Stanton’s Girls’ Figure Training Academy takes place in an unusual modeling agency, operated by Mrs. Stringent. Her models like to wear tight corsets but Mrs. Stringent uses complex devices to further reduce waists. Sometimes, she
imposes a regimen that’s a bit more than her models bargained for, involving unusual contraptions and unique, high-heeled shoes. In the end, the models revolt against the boss’s excesses and give her a taste of her own discipline.
Mr. Stanton does a great job on legs in stockings and heels. These pictures are from the last years of his early period, during which produced for Exotique.
Baroness Steel – 30 episodes
A Swiss draftsman, Jim’s fine pen work shows the consistency of an accomplished technician. The gleaming metal, rivets, hinges, clamps and radio-controlled robot reflect Jim’s industrial orientation to the eroticism of restraint. In at least two panels, he places a welding torch in the hand of his shapely protagonist. Mr. Klaw published some of Jim’s comic serials in the Nutrix series.
Baroness Steel, a demanding woman of royal bearing, imposes painful discipline on any of her household staff who err in the slightest degree. These penalties often take the formof prolonged bondage in complex mechanisms of restraint. An insurrection usurps the reign of the Baroness and fixes her in the painful machinery she used on the women in her employ. She escapes from the grasp of the mutineers and wreaks a cruel vengeance on them.
The pictures show extremes in corsets and heels. The fine ink work is dense with detail but difficult to appreciate when presented two panels to a page. The optimized ebook version opens the images to careful scrutiny.
Captives in Distress – 18 episodes
A native of Mexico, Adolfo Ruiz was one of the most prolific of Mr. Klaw’s artists. With a quick, casual style, he dressed his shapely female characters in short skirts, stockings and high-heeled sandals. His damsels often found themselves outdoors, on horseback, among cactus or travelling across a rocky desert.
Set in a fictitious Latin American country, Captives in Distress tells the story of a kidnapping, escape and revenge. Everyone involved is skillful at using ropes, trees, horses and other devices to keep curvaceous women in uncomfortable positions.
optimized for ebook viewing
Most episodes in these comic serials consist of two or more panels and text that narrates all of the panels in the episode. In the ebooks, each panel is placed on a separate page, next to the text that describes the illustration. The panel fills the screen from top to bottom, exposing details, reducing the need for scrolling and zooming.
Three optimized ebooks, delivered by download from your 30th Street Graphics account.