The pictures on this thread depicting beauty put to death have been so deliciously brutal I've been inspired to have a go myself.
Hope you it.
Hey, nailed - we always try to encourage new artists. I work mainly in the manips area, not rendering, so I have no idea what the difficulties associated with this would be, so you can take my comments as purely aesthetic and based in personal opinion. I think your model is very good. The amount of blood is perhaps a bit extreme (for my taste anyway), and the colour is a bit pinkish. Still, if this is your first outing, or close to your first, I think you're doing well. There are lots of people with varying tastes and turn-ons here, and you're almost bound to have your art appeal to someone. Keep going.
When I was blocked from the forum and deprived of my home computer, I googled variations of "naked crucified women" a lot on this tablet. You're probably not surprised that I found lots of people that conflate crucifixion with The Crucifixion, and are in deep, scandalized denial that The Lord hung on his cross naked, much less women.
Part of what keeps the crux addicts coming is that blashemy component. Which certainly has scared off cable movie networks.
With the onset on streaming video services, I wonder if a niche might be created for, oh, I dunno, a live action version of The Serpent's Eye. Or Fall of the Barbarian Queen?
I think one problem is, on the one hand, policies that try to categorize porn into "safe/okay" and "over the line/not okay", and on the other hand, prevailing norms in society where images of nudity and sex may simply be considered slightly naughty erotica, BDSM is more naughty and potentially deviant, and anyone interested in naked crucifixion is clearly mentally deranged. Perhaps I'm overstating or exaggerating, but I don't think I am very far off the mark. As Bobinder has pointed out, anything like crux or rape fantasy is now illegal in the UK.
In that regard, while there might be a niche market for crux drama, even given that hint of blasphemy, I wonder how many production companies would jump at it, given the fact that they would basically lose the UK market, and any countries that follow that lead. People may not like a law like that, but once you have one, and have described it as a basic decency law, it's very hard for anyone to say they don't like that law, without themselves being immediately branded as a potentially dangerous social deviant, with possible job loss, censure, and other consequences coming from that. Few people would stick their neck out. We know that most of our members are not terrible dangerous people, but we also know the value of a safe space. I'm not looking to see a specialty crux channel on TV any time soon.