Anyone who would cloth that beauty deserves to be mocked.
The Gallente have an answer to this, just saying. Of course, this depends on whether Synthia wanted a tarted up Synthia or a synthed up Tartia.
This is a post for the Church of the Crimson Saviour. It is tarting up Backstage and may offend anyone that perceives it tasteless or easy pickings. Tart level: Unrighteous.
"Due to the popularity of Midna Lyre, a Gallentean fashion house designed a series of clothes for the Sani Sabik (wannabe) segment."
In addition to being Unrighteous, the following image may also be
Not Safe for Work.
[spoiler]
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Cleavage? Check.
Shows leg? Check (even if the dress would not be transparent).
Essentially, the chest of the wearer of the "Heartbreak" dress (pictured) is covered by a somewhat-supporting heart-shaped brassiere integreated to the dress. The function of the unmentionables is served by a blooddrop-shaped cover (which may or may not extend into a heart-shaped rear-part for the more chaste wearers). The "dress" part is a single piece sheet of thin slightly elastic transparent nanofiber, which covers the other parts of the dress (including the shoes, also covered in thin transparent film).
And yes, this covers more than some of the old Gallente char creator clothes, at least if what was visible was of any indicator. Process: I originally just drew thru the outline of Synthia, practicing to use my pen tablet (which I haven't used in a looong time). The idea was to make this look more like a technical diagram. However, my drawing isn't yet quite steady enough. Next I tried colour (I previously have mainly worked with pencil or greyscale on the tablet). Colour on a greyscale outline didn't look good, so I then proceeded to 'shop the clothes on Synthia, using somewhat distressing amount of time to retouch the straps of her underwear away (somewhat explained by the fact that my tablet stopped working due to an unknown reason and I needed to finish things with the mouse). At this point, the dress was slightly more covering (if such a thing can be said about a transparent dress), but I started wondering how one could put it on. So I removed some textile from the middle so that the wearer "could" pull the bottom part on and then fix the top part by a strap on the back. The red parts were also originally meant to be bright red & on the surface of the dress, but then I figured that there was no way for the bottom part to actually work and covered them with the "same material" the rest of the dress is made of.