We're so used to certain publications and websites which feature photos of naked people going out of their way to say that they're not porn that the editorial statement for the newishly-launched WLTF magazine is a breath of fresh air:
"WLTF is primarily about desire, sexual desire, so does that make it porn? I don't know ...The images are about what the contributors would like to fuck, but that could be anything, it could be human, animal, vegetable, object or anything else. It's about desire, that's it, desire and all of its subjectivity. Contributors just have to use their imagination and be honest about what their fetishes and fantasies are."
All of which dovetails nicely with our own editorial mission here at Fleshbot, and explains why we're so looking forward to seeing more issues (both digital and print versions) coming down the pipe from editor Rodrigo Novaes and his band of merry contributors. After all, just because you're not turned on by photos of a naked woman wrapped in cellophane or a guy in underwear and a Darth Vader mask doesn't mean there isn't someone out there who is. As we're so fond of saying around here, it's a big world.
• WLTF Mag (via sex-and-blogs.com et al.)
• See also: WLTF Blog (wltf-mag.com) and WLTF Flickr Pool (flickr.com)
• Thumbnail via (l-r) Cynthia Pimenta, Kevin Hartmann, Nate "Igor" Smith, Aya Rosen (from WLTF #1)