The problems I found with the thin straps made me think that a wider webbing would be better/more comfortable, I bought a roll of 2" webbing, buckles, tension locks and rings and decided to try to make some adjustments, the stitching was a pain but I used the speedy stitcher sewing awl (some sort of craft/sail repair device) which made things a bit easier. Overall I'd say its a solid recommendation, as long as the shipping and potential import duty don't make it hugely expensive. 3 The harness is made from 1" webbing which can quickly become uncomfortable when you get it good and tight. 2 The mess of straps that make up the harness is complicated and can put you off from using it. Once you have it figured out and over your body, its very simple to get restrained, and with practice it can be very secure, release is achieved by catching the end of a friction buckle on the corner of a piece of solid furniture (or the supplied screw ring) which releaves the friction holding your wrists behind your back, then you can free the rest of your body from the harness.Ī great piece of equipment, but I found a few problems with the set up 1 I live in the UK so the shipping from Canada, import duty and the unit price all added up to a pretty expensive purchase, enough to prevent me from ordering anything else. The harness is a very well made piece of equippment, its a little bit confusing at first due to it being made of all black nylon webbing, its a big mess of the stuff when you pick it up (to be honest, it stays rather confusing even when practiced) I posted in the box tie thread a while ago that I had bought a self bondage box tie harness from bondage webbing, here is my review and further findings.
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