Details
Posted Date: 08/08/2015
Approved Date: 08/08/2015
Approved By: Chuck
Posted By: LordHiro
Artist: N/A
Source Link: [Link]
Favorited By
Image Details


comm__din_s_sadistic_sweet_tooth_by_jora_bora-d94t9bz.png

Dage 8/8/2015 8:05:27 PM Rating: 0

It's impossible for me to favourite this enough
KingdomKeeper 8/8/2015 10:08:29 PM Rating: 4

Adding More Fuel to Din's Fire :3
tuxedo_cat 8/9/2015 12:37:02 AM Rating: 0

Well this didn't take long to become one of my all-time favorite vore images. Which considering vore is my main fetish, that's saying something. My thanks to jora-bora for this excellent piece.
iswear12 8/9/2015 2:32:44 AM Rating: 0

Normally I have gripes with Jora-Bora's work, usually involving the face
But that fork perspective scene and subsequent panels were absurdly well done, props.
gigagyu 8/9/2015 2:46:05 AM Rating: 6

Well! Happy Vore-Day indeed!
DrkPhazon 8/9/2015 9:46:58 AM Rating: 0

Ehh... it a cool vore picture indeed but it seems like her stomach is so freaking small...
tuxedo_cat 8/9/2015 3:01:55 PM Rating: 0

That, or she managed to cram a strawberry the size of a grapefruit down her throat. I think the stomach can shrink to a smaller volume though, naturally. So it gets away in my book.

Either way, I like how it pulled off making her insides feel tight and intimate. And the sound captions make the whole thing feel considerably rich and lively.
WTK55 8/9/2015 4:29:32 PM Rating: 0

Its decent but Jora has done better in my opinion.
viking729 8/10/2015 1:57:55 AM Rating: 0

Yup, that's right. Human stomachs are quite distendable, relatively speaking, due to the folded structure of the tissue they're made of. Empty stomachs have a capacity of about 50ml, give or take. After eating, it's around a liter.
viking729 8/10/2015 2:13:44 PM Rating: 0

Mhm. There's a 9-region system for dividing the abdomen that nobody I know uses outside of the classroom, though I'm sure it's still fairly prevalent in general. What I always see in real life is the 4-region system, which divides the abdomen into right and left upper and lower quadrants. Basically a vertical line down your middle, and a horizontal line across the navel. The stomach is in the left upper quadrant--In normal anatomy, anyway.