FROM ABDADDYMIKE:
“DIAPERDAZE is a name I created in the 1994 to brand several "comix" I commissioned to illustrate some of my infantilism and adult baby fantasies,” Mike says. “I did not draw the art, but take full credit/responsibility for the concept, storyboard and layout.”
“After reading a diaper ad in the LA Free Press in 1976, I learned I was not the only guy into diapers and infantilism on the planet, and I became an avid reader of AB stories published in magazines and newsletters like Rubber Life, Letters, Nugget, Tales from the Crib, PlayPen, and DPF. Exciting stories but rarely illustrated -- a deficiency I wanted to fix to enhance my enjoyment. So I hired different artists over the years to draw different AB scenarios usually involving forced regression and diaper discipline -- as FEMDOM was the dominant theme of AB stories at the time.”
“It also wasn't that uncommon at the time to use diapers and babywear to initiate high school and college freshmen when joining teams and fraternities. I've always hated the jock and rich boy culture, but was fascinated that straight boys liked to humiliate other boys in diapers, sometimes in public, and that pledges/newbies willingly accepted it. Consequently, humiliating spoiled rich boys became a favorite fetish theme of mine.”
“To make a long story short, I was attracted to the challenge and satisfaction of creating something from scratch -- as a "diaper comix" was original and unique. I only deserve a "C" on the writing, but I am proud of the details I put into the story -- the step-by-step regression of the character to submissive baby hood -- as it increased the intensity."
ANCIENT HISTORY.
“I originally intended the first comic ‘Fraternity Baby’ for my personal use, but the artist insisted that I should 'share' this fetish art by pitching it to comic and graphic art publishers. That was unsuccessful, but saw a website as a cheaper method of self-publishing. I registered Diaperdaze.com in 1993 but gave it up as the annual registration and web hosting fee far exceeded any sales -- and i gave up the site name.”