Re: Other fetishes
I've mentioned I'm into really large women. I love to see them wearing things that make you think, "there's a market for leggings/shorts/panties/bras that large?", and I also like to see them sitting on chairs that aren't made to hold them. Either too big to fit, or too heavy, but sitting on them, anyway.
When I was a lot younger there were these fiberglass chairs with metal bases that were very common. They're worth a lot of money these days as retro mid-century style, and there are modern versions and knockoffs that are no longer made from fiberglass. I love these because they were common and I loved to see people way too heavy for them sit in them. The manufacturer says they are rated to 250 pounds. I have a bunch of them and a woman three times that size has sat in them quite a few times. They bend like crazy, make cracking noises, and the base twists so much you can see it flex. The fiberglass seat has so many microfractures that it looks really old and worn, and the mounts between the seat and the base have made round stress marks in the seat that definitely aren't there on unstressed chairs. But the weak point of these is the epoxy holding the seat to the base. I've re-epoxied some of these. Love these chairs.
There are modern versions of these, and ones with the same seat but different bases, that are rated to 250 or 330 pounds, depending on who makes them, but I don't think there's a lick of difference between them. In my soft pron collection there are pictures of a woman of about 600 pounds sitting on one of these at a table with two normal size people. Looks like a toy chair under her, she's so much bigger than it is and she doesn't fit under the table.
I've taken my 750 pound friend to restaurants. She's been on this style of chair, the modern knockoffs. She'll generally sit in two of them, but it's such a spectacle to set up that she sometimes just sits on one chair. Three times its capacity. Last time she did that the plastic seat folded in the reverse of its shape and left crease marks when she got off of it. She decided to just sit back on it so she wouldn't damage another, but something make a POP noise and she just about fell on her ass as the seat partially separated from the base. Sat back on it, but kept a lot of her weight on her feet. Still felt like it would break, so she sat delicately on another chair, but again only one chair. Didn't break that one.
When she was about 70 pounds smaller we had an event at her high school. She tried to sit in one of the desks and could just about get one hip into the thing, just part of one leg under it, and her belly just about covering the desk. As she put more and more of her weight on it, the legs spread wider and wider and the desk pitched badly, and we weren't sure it would stop bending before it folded in half, so she wanted to get back up but couldn't. Had to put the rest of her weight on it just to get her leg under her for leverage, and the thing made screeching and grinding noises and bent like crazy. Made a loud POW noise. Got her out of it and it mostly un-bent, but it retained some of the bend she'd made.
She grabbed another chair, a plastic seat with a metal base. Said she'd damaged some of these at only 500 pounds in school, but had never broken one outright. To test its strength, she leaned on it on one knee. Her knee cap was as large as the seat. Sat on it and it made grinding noise but didn't break. The legs spread so much the feet weren't square to the ground. I was sure she'd end up on her ass, but it held her for a couple hours like that.
Lots of stories I could tell of her stressing the hell out of furniture. In my house she sits mostly on inflatables, because they're easy for her to move by herself, and they aren't expensive to replace. She uses those fiberglass chairs for eating at the kitchen table. The four I have in the kitchen are all partially broken, but have had all the epoxy mounts replaced, and I love to see her sit in them. She's so used to hearing cracking and popping and grinding noises when she sits that it no longer phases her and she isn't even particularly careful. The old fiberglass ones with the epoxied mounts are definitely sturdier than the newer ones, but she's broken the fiberglass seat nearly completely off on two chairs that are now in storage for repair.
She mostly eats in the living room, though, sitting on a stack of air mattresses. She's not careful sitting on those, either. Drops on them with a WOOMPH and a lot of vinyl-on-vinyl popping noises, and skin-on-vinyl boomy noises if she's not wearing pants.
I've mentioned I'm into really large women. I love to see them wearing things that make you think, "there's a market for leggings/shorts/panties/bras that large?", and I also like to see them sitting on chairs that aren't made to hold them. Either too big to fit, or too heavy, but sitting on them, anyway.
When I was a lot younger there were these fiberglass chairs with metal bases that were very common. They're worth a lot of money these days as retro mid-century style, and there are modern versions and knockoffs that are no longer made from fiberglass. I love these because they were common and I loved to see people way too heavy for them sit in them. The manufacturer says they are rated to 250 pounds. I have a bunch of them and a woman three times that size has sat in them quite a few times. They bend like crazy, make cracking noises, and the base twists so much you can see it flex. The fiberglass seat has so many microfractures that it looks really old and worn, and the mounts between the seat and the base have made round stress marks in the seat that definitely aren't there on unstressed chairs. But the weak point of these is the epoxy holding the seat to the base. I've re-epoxied some of these. Love these chairs.
There are modern versions of these, and ones with the same seat but different bases, that are rated to 250 or 330 pounds, depending on who makes them, but I don't think there's a lick of difference between them. In my soft pron collection there are pictures of a woman of about 600 pounds sitting on one of these at a table with two normal size people. Looks like a toy chair under her, she's so much bigger than it is and she doesn't fit under the table.
I've taken my 750 pound friend to restaurants. She's been on this style of chair, the modern knockoffs. She'll generally sit in two of them, but it's such a spectacle to set up that she sometimes just sits on one chair. Three times its capacity. Last time she did that the plastic seat folded in the reverse of its shape and left crease marks when she got off of it. She decided to just sit back on it so she wouldn't damage another, but something make a POP noise and she just about fell on her ass as the seat partially separated from the base. Sat back on it, but kept a lot of her weight on her feet. Still felt like it would break, so she sat delicately on another chair, but again only one chair. Didn't break that one.
When she was about 70 pounds smaller we had an event at her high school. She tried to sit in one of the desks and could just about get one hip into the thing, just part of one leg under it, and her belly just about covering the desk. As she put more and more of her weight on it, the legs spread wider and wider and the desk pitched badly, and we weren't sure it would stop bending before it folded in half, so she wanted to get back up but couldn't. Had to put the rest of her weight on it just to get her leg under her for leverage, and the thing made screeching and grinding noises and bent like crazy. Made a loud POW noise. Got her out of it and it mostly un-bent, but it retained some of the bend she'd made.
She grabbed another chair, a plastic seat with a metal base. Said she'd damaged some of these at only 500 pounds in school, but had never broken one outright. To test its strength, she leaned on it on one knee. Her knee cap was as large as the seat. Sat on it and it made grinding noise but didn't break. The legs spread so much the feet weren't square to the ground. I was sure she'd end up on her ass, but it held her for a couple hours like that.
Lots of stories I could tell of her stressing the hell out of furniture. In my house she sits mostly on inflatables, because they're easy for her to move by herself, and they aren't expensive to replace. She uses those fiberglass chairs for eating at the kitchen table. The four I have in the kitchen are all partially broken, but have had all the epoxy mounts replaced, and I love to see her sit in them. She's so used to hearing cracking and popping and grinding noises when she sits that it no longer phases her and she isn't even particularly careful. The old fiberglass ones with the epoxied mounts are definitely sturdier than the newer ones, but she's broken the fiberglass seat nearly completely off on two chairs that are now in storage for repair.
She mostly eats in the living room, though, sitting on a stack of air mattresses. She's not careful sitting on those, either. Drops on them with a WOOMPH and a lot of vinyl-on-vinyl popping noises, and skin-on-vinyl boomy noises if she's not wearing pants.
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