Why Custom Femdom Content Exists
Custom clips allow buyers to request specific scenarios, scripts, props, or dynamics that aren't covered in a creator's existing library. For the buyer, it's personal — the clip was made for you. For the creator, it's a revenue stream with higher per-clip rates.
But custom requests go wrong constantly. Buyers approach creators poorly, get rejected, and wonder why. Creators get flooded with disrespectful requests and become selective. This guide bridges that gap.
DO: Start with a Purchase
Before sending a custom request to any creator, buy one of their existing clips. This establishes you as a real customer, not a time-waster. It also tells you whether the creator's style matches what you're looking for.
DO: Be Specific and Complete
A good custom request includes: scenario description, any specific dialogue phrases, props or wardrobe if applicable, clip length, whether it should be addressed to you by name, and any limits you want the creator to be aware of.
A bad custom request: "Can you make a clip just for me? DM me."
DO: Accept the Creator's Rate
Custom clips cost more than catalogue clips. A creator who charges $150 for a 10-minute custom is not price-gouging — she is being paid for her time writing, filming, editing, and delivering personalised content. Do not negotiate unless the creator invites it.
DON'T: Request Illegal Content
Any request that sounds like it could involve minors, non-consent represented as real, or non-participants (real people who haven't consented to be featured) will get you blocked. Permanently.
DON'T: Send Explicit Details Without Consent
Start with a general outline. Let the creator ask follow-up questions. Sending an extremely detailed, explicit fantasy in the first message to a stranger is the equivalent of unsolicited explicit messages — it's not welcome.
Finding Creators Who Accept Customs
Browse creator profiles on ClipsVault and look for bio notes about custom availability.