Wetting the Dresses "Rosemary and Purity wet each others dresses in the dungeon"
Rosemary, in a 100% cotton, lace-up medieval wench dress, and Purity, in a lovely 1980s-style long blue number, spend a pleasant afternoon in the dungeon pouring water over each other's outfits. They start with pint glasses, but once those are used up, they graduate to pouring full buckets over each other.
The pourings are decided by playing scissors-paper-stone, and with each round the loser sits unresisting and allows her opponent to pour wherever she likes. Laps are filled, water goes down the fronts of their dresses, later on they stand leaning over their chairs and have full buckets poured over their backs, bottoms, and down their legs.
Both girls end up totally drenched from head to foot, their heads and hair doesn't escape the deluge either.
Potatoman-J said: Nice dresses. Did you ascertain by the wettening if either of them floated, weighed the same as a duck, or were made of wood?
Damn, we wet the wenches and then completely forgot to apply the witch tests. I suppose that means we're going to have to get them back and soak them again?
wetmana said: wow great dressing , good dowsing, and wet look shine
Thanks! They really enjoyed dowsing each other with the full buckets of water, loads of fun!
Know what you mean about the shine, and both of these dresses displayed it beautifully, especially the pure cotton one that Rosemary is wearing.
Do you (or anyone else reading) have any opinions on transparent slime, as opposed to water, for wetting clothes with? We recently did a custom scene where the customer asked for transparent slime so we ordered some (first time we'd played with it) and used it the custom and another scene. It acted kind of like "thicker water" and really made the girls' clothes shine beautifully. Tempted to do some more, and wondering if the result would count as wetlook, or is it definitely messy because it's still a form of gunge?