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Encyclopedia > AtomAge

AtomAge magazine (later AtomAge International magazine) was a fetish magazine published in Britain by the clothes designer John Sutcliffe in the 1970s as an offshoot of his AtomAge fetish clothing business. The first AtomAge clothing catalogue was published in 1965; the first issue of the magazine in A5 format was published in 1972 remaining in print until 1980. The magazine specialized in leather, rubber and PVC fetishism, with a heavy emphasis on rubber and leather catsuits, cloaks, and gasmasks. In 1981, the publication was split in two: AtomAge Rubberist (similar to the original AtomAge) and AtomAge Bondage (wich contained more overtly S&M content). Sutcliffe made this decision because the Bondage material he began to introduce in the late 1970s issues of the original AtomAge bothered some rubber entusiast. Both magazines remained in print until 1985. A fetish magazine is a magazine devoted to sexual fetishism. ... The British clothes designer and fetish photographer John Sutcliffe (died 1987) was famous in the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s as a designer of clothes for afficionados of leather, rubber and PVC fetishism, with an emphasis on rubber and leather catsuits, cloaks, and gasmasks. ... Jimmy Beertow is the most famous pornstar of this decade he starred in movies such as BackDoorSluts3 and the Famous Schoolhouse Confessions Parts 1 through 6. He ultilized the secret school location made famous by the series. ... Leather fetishism is the name popularly used to describe a fetishistic attraction to people wearing leather, or in certain cases, to the garments themselves. ... Two women in rubber-miniskirts and -tops Rubber fetishism is the fetishistic attraction to people wearing rubber, or in certain cases, to the garments themselves. ... Woman in red Catsuit A catsuit is a skin-tight one-piece garment with sleeves and long legs, and sometimes with feet or gloves, sometimes with a hood. ... A cloak is a type of loose garment which is worn over indoor clothing and serves the same purpose as an overcoat – it protects the wearer from the cold, rain or wind for example, or it may form part of a fashionable outfit (e. ... A gas mask is a mask worn on the face to protect the body from airborne pollutants and toxins. ... S&M can be an abbreviation for: Slave and Master, a form of Sexual roleplaying Sadism and Masochism (AKA Sado-masochism, SM) Serbia and Montenegro Symphony and Metallica (Metallica album) Sign & Magnitude, a means to encode signed integers in binary S&M is also the name of a Metallica Concert... The British clothes designer and fetish photographer John Sutcliffe (died 1987) was famous in the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s as a designer of clothes for afficionados of leather, rubber and PVC fetishism, with an emphasis on rubber and leather catsuits, cloaks, and gasmasks. ... Bondage-Videos on JohnThompson. ... Jimmy Beertow is the most famous pornstar of this decade he starred in movies such as BackDoorSluts3 and the Famous Schoolhouse Confessions Parts 1 through 6. He ultilized the secret school location made famous by the series. ...


One of Sutcliffe's main goals was to "dignify" the popular perception of fetish. He is regarded as one of the "patron saints" of the world-wide Rubberist community as a result.


It is a common mistake to think John Sutcliffe designed the clothes for the TV series The Avengers, but he actually didn't, although they might have been made in his shop. The British clothes designer and fetish photographer John Sutcliffe (died 1987) was famous in the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s as a designer of clothes for afficionados of leather, rubber and PVC fetishism, with an emphasis on rubber and leather catsuits, cloaks, and gasmasks. ... The most famous incarnation of The Avengers, John Steed (Patrick Macnee) and Emma Peel (Diana Rigg) appear on the cover of a 1994 reprint of an Avengers novel co-written by Macnee. ...


See also

A fetish magazine is a magazine devoted to sexual fetishism. ... A rubberist is a person with a fetish for rubber, latex or, more loosely, PVC clothing. ... Two women in rubber-miniskirts and -tops Rubber fetishism is the fetishistic attraction to people wearing rubber, or in certain cases, to the garments themselves. ...

External links

  • AtomAge Appreciation Site, an un-official site with images of all AtomAge magazine covers and the complete history of AtomAge
  • A collection of AtomAge magazine cover pictures
  • EVOLVER article on John Sutcliffe (in German)
  • Stills from Sutcliffe's "under three layers" rubber fetish video

  Results from FactBites:
 
AtomAge - definition of AtomAge in Encyclopedia (163 words)
AtomAge magazine (later AtomAge International magazine) was a fetish magazine published in Britain by the clothes designer John Sutcliffe in the 1970s as an offshoot of his AtomAge fetish clothing business.
The first AtomAge clothing catalogue was published in 1965; The first issue of the magazine was published in 1972; AtomAge remained in business until at least 1977.
Some of the clothes John Sutcliffe designed can be seen in the TV series The Avengers.
Talk:AtomAge - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (144 words)
"AtomAge Leather Couture" was located at 10a Dryden Street (off Drury Lane) in London, it was also known as the AtomAge workshop as it was here that the atomage garments were produced, although the name "AtomAge Leather Couture" relates to the entire AtomAge business and not just the shop.
Personal callers were welcome at the shop, either for purchasing/ordering AtomAge clothes or for purchasing copies of AtomAge magazines (they were only avaiable by private subscription (via mail order) or directly from AtomAge in Dryden Street).
The premises in Dryden Street were open until December 1983 when AtomAge moved to Victoria Road, NW10.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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