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TrueBeauty TS
12-12-2005, 09:04 PM
What do you think? Do you guys like this look or not? Seems like most of the Brazillian girls go for this look.

hillbilly
12-12-2005, 09:32 PM
love them. i have no idea why. well actually i guess its because the contrast shows the shape of the ass and tits. makes me want pull my hair out. lol

Vicki Richter
12-12-2005, 09:50 PM
I think they are amazingly sexy. I no longer have any tan or lines... At one point I thought they were permanently burned into my skin. Once my scars chill out I will probably tan again.

This photo was taken of me for Bob's T-Girls but the person who posted it before seems to have removed the logo... So I am giving him the credit.

Quinn
12-12-2005, 11:04 PM
I think they are amazingly sexy.

Cosign.

-Quinn

TomSelis
12-13-2005, 01:00 AM
Cosign.

Two times.

BOATER
12-13-2005, 01:03 AM
After that pic there is no denying. Tan lines are good.

Hara_Juku Tgirl
12-13-2005, 01:13 AM
Hmm..Ive half and half on this. I like tan lines on someone..but not on me personally since my skin is too sensitive and dont tan well..:(

But regardless, Ive seen tan lines that looked great on some people..and not so great on others.

~Kisses.

HTG

Paul
12-13-2005, 02:22 AM
i gota say i aint fussed in them, they can look good depending, but most times there just overdone and dont look good at all.

Andrew Johnson
12-13-2005, 04:41 AM
I like 'em on some and not so much on others. Depends on the the girl I guess.

NickTheQuick
12-13-2005, 05:55 AM
I like 'em on some and not so much on others. Depends on the the girl I guess.

I agree. It's definitely not a deal breaker like a huge forehead or a horrendous boob job or huge smelly feet are though.

4DegreesWarmer
12-13-2005, 08:21 AM
Eh, tan lines reek of laziness and incompletion...

Seriously, I don't view them as being hot...they're either a turn off or just "meh," doing nothing for me either way

sub337
12-13-2005, 09:16 AM
Love 'em!

sub337
12-13-2005, 09:23 AM
Oops! Here's the pics I meant to post!

skyler
12-13-2005, 09:32 AM
sasha rulz with tanlines :D

skyler
12-13-2005, 09:34 AM
mmmmmmmmm yummy

sub337
12-14-2005, 10:06 AM
Bianca's tanlines...boobs a little faint, but nice, nonetheless!

BlackAdder
12-14-2005, 10:25 AM
I love the tan lines, but honestly I wouldnt want my girl tanning alot......Ive seen what happens when they start hittin 35+ and theyve been tanning since 18 or before.....not pretty.

Hara_Juku Tgirl
12-14-2005, 02:46 PM
LOL. True. Aside from skin cancer..Tanning too much ages the skin. Therefore, Some people looked alot older than their actual age. LOL.

Premature aging of skin is unflatterring for both men and women. I suggest get a spray tan instead of baking under the hash UV rays of the sun..Just a suggestion.;)

2004 US SKIN CANCER FACT SHEET

* Over half of all new cancers are skin cancers.

* More than 1 million new cases of skin cancer will be diagnosed in the United States this year.

* About 80 percent of the new skin cancer cases will be basal cell carcinoma, 16 percent are squamous cell carcinoma, and 4 percent are melanoma.

* An estimated 10,250 people will die of skin cancer this year, 7,910 from melanoma and 2,340 from other skin cancers.

* There will be about 95,880 new cases of melanoma in 2004 – 40,780 in situ (noninvasive) and 55,100 invasive (29,900 men and 25,200 women). This is a 4 percent increase in new cases of melanoma from 2003. In 2004, at current rates one in 37 Americans have a lifetime risk of developing melanoma and one in 65 Americans have a lifetime risk of developing invasive melanoma.

* One person dies of melanoma every hour. In 2004, 7,910 deaths will be attributed to melanoma – 5,050 men and 2,860 women. Older Caucasian males have the highest mortality rates from melanoma.

* The incidence of melanoma more than tripled among Caucasians between 1980 and 2003.

* More than 77 percent of skin cancer deaths are from melanoma.

* Melanoma is more common than any non-skin cancer among women between 25 and 29 years old.

* Invasive melanoma is the fifth most common cancer in men and the seventh most common cancer in women.

Source: American Cancer Society’s 2004 Facts & Figures

http://www.cancer.org/docroot/home/index.asp

~Kisses.

HTG

Hara_Juku Tgirl
12-14-2005, 03:21 PM
At age 17 years, a teen-ager has significant sun damage due to deliberate tanning on the beach or in tanning salons.

http://www.skincarephysicians.com/agingskinnet/images/17.jpg

In a woman 37 years old, subsurface sun damage is clearly visible in ultraviolet light.

http://www.skincarephysicians.com/agingskinnet/images/37.jpg

At age 52 years a woman has "old-looking" skin in visible light and significantly sun-damaged skin in ultraviolet light.

http://www.skincarephysicians.com/agingskinnet/images/52.jpg

A 64-year-old beach community resident has skin that chronicles a lifetime of chronic sun exposure. The skin is dry, inelastic, heavily mottled, with wrinkles.

http://www.skincarephysicians.com/agingskinnet/images/64.jpg

As skin ages and accumulates sun damage, a number of lesions (sores or spots on the skin) become more common. These include:

* "Age" and "liver" spots (lentigines)—flat, brown areas with rounded edges usually found on the face, hands, back and feet. They are age-related and photoaging-related, and have nothing to do with the liver. While they are unsightly, they are not dangerous. However, a large, flat, dark area with irregular borders should be examined by a dermatologist to make sure it is not melanoma.

*Actinic keratoses—thick, warty, rough, reddish growths on sun-exposed areas of the skin. They may be a precursor to squamous cell carcinoma.

*Seborrheic keratoses—brown or black raised spots, or wart-like growths that appear to be stuck to the skin’s surface. They are not cancerous or precancerous, and are easily removed.

*Cherry angiomas—harmless, small, bright red domes created by dilated blood vessels. They occur in more than 85% of middle-aged to elderly people, usually on the body. A dermatologist can remove them

*Telangiectasias ("broken capillaries")—dilated facial blood vessels, usually related to sun damage. A dermatologist can treat them.

*Bruising—often a result of skin having lost its fat padding and becoming more susceptible to injury. Some drugs may cause bleeding under the skin. Bruises that persist should be examined by a dermatologist.

*Wrinkles—changes in the elastic tissue from exposure to sunlight, effects of gravity, or motion factors in the skin. A dermatologist can treat wrinkles with dermatologic surgery.

*Skin diseases more common in older people include shingles, leg ulcers, and seborrheic dermatitis.

JUST A FRIENDLY REMINDER NOT TO OVER DO IT AND TAKE GOOD CARE OF YOUR SKIN.

~Kisses.

HTG

Veracity
04-17-2008, 04:54 AM
Megan is always stunningly gorgeous but those tanlines cause more than a little drool.......
Tanlines = Yes!
http://img105.imagevenue.com/loc710/th_00485_1meghan059_123_710lo.jpg (http://img105.imagevenue.com/img.php?image=00485_1meghan059_123_710lo.jpg)

BlackLagoon
04-17-2008, 05:47 AM
Love tan lines!!!

Nikka
04-17-2008, 07:17 AM
me likey me likey

Willie Escalade
04-17-2008, 09:16 AM
I love 'em as well! :D

BiCuriousGeorge
04-17-2008, 07:54 PM
Tan lines can be very hot but when a girl has a dark tan and has ghost white boobs that isn't sexy to me. The pic that Willie put up is extremely hot because the lines are barely there but you can still see them.

rt_saurus
04-18-2008, 03:08 PM
Tan lines are hot - you never see them on a guy (or shouldn't) so they are another means for a TS to appear feminine.