These are some basic rules and guidelines for you to know what is, and is not, accepted into our group’s gallery: 1. All submissions must relate to the theme of the year of the group. Submission for themes of past years is not accepted – only the current year’s gallery is open for submission. 2. We accept all art media, including, but not limited to: Traditional & digital drawing, 3D art, photography, literature, and more, with the exception of AI generated art. 3. All submissions must explicitly contain bondage. If the submission does not contain bondage, even if it was a prelude to a continuation which did have bondage, then it won’t be accepted. (In other words, if you had Pic 1 with no bondage, but its continuation Pic 2 does have, Pic 1 won’t be accepted even if it was a prelude to Pic 2 which does have). 4.We (Zodiac-DiD) reserve the right to reject any submission we do not like because we think it fails to achieve a minimum level of quality. We expect our gallery to be filled with work of an acceptable level of quality. 5. All submissions that fail to respect the basic rules of DA according to sexual pictures, as all bondage is considered a sexual image on DA, will be instantly rejected. Some of the most common mentioned DA rules in bondage pictures are: - No representation of underage characters, both if the character is a minor in the series from where it comes from, and/or its physical appearance is that of a minor. 6. There are also certain subjects we won’t accept in our group: - No death. Perils will be accepted, as long as no explicit representation of death appears in the submission. 7. At last, but not least, we expect all contributors to our group to be polite and respectful, both in what they depict in their submissions, the description, and their comments/replies. If necessary, we will take proper actions against those who fail to show respect to others. We at Zodiac-DiD expect that you all can follow these rules, and most importantly, we hope that you have lots of fun in our group!. |
Personally I'd prefer succubus to domme, but that's just me.
Thought the first: The category should allow variety, such as variety in settings and time-periods, variety in clothing and costumes, or variety in the types of women presented. "Year of the Librarian" was especially good this way because a "librarian" could be ancient, medieval, historical-modern, present day, futuristic, or fantasy-world. She could also be thin, fat, young old, with long or short hair, and with white, black, yellow, blue, or green skin - or even fur.
Thought the second: The theme should be one that can be shown graphically, even with the captive in various states of dress or undress, and with a minimum of reliance on the title, caption, or accompanying story. (Although works that are stories don't have this problem.) "Year of the bunny girl" was especially good on this point. "Year of the Librarian" was OK but not great, and "Year of the Witch" caused difficulties - or at least caused me difficulties.