I did these little portraits for the new book "Furries Among Us",edited by Thurston Howl Publishing. Here's what I said about the book on Amazon:
An insightful and thoroughly comprehensive look at what in means to be a "furry". I would recommend this book to anyone who is curious about the furry fandom, whether they're just learning of it for the first time or have been part of it for years. Through engaging personal narratives (I loved Cutter Cat's touching description of the "why" of fursuiting) and fascinating new studies (Nuka's "By The Numbers" had me quoting stats out loud to anyone who would listen), this book clears up many of the misconceptions surrounding furries, and explains why so many people continue to fall in love with this community.
An insightful and thoroughly comprehensive look at what in means to be a "furry". I would recommend this book to anyone who is curious about the furry fandom, whether they're just learning of it for the first time or have been part of it for years. Through engaging personal narratives (I loved Cutter Cat's touching description of the "why" of fursuiting) and fascinating new studies (Nuka's "By The Numbers" had me quoting stats out loud to anyone who would listen), this book clears up many of the misconceptions surrounding furries, and explains why so many people continue to fall in love with this community.
Category Artwork (Digital) / All
Species Unspecified / Any
Gender Multiple characters
Size 1079 x 1280px
File Size 330.3 kB
Oh, I didn't know you were also involved in this! Very cool, love the little portraits. :)
Cool portraits. I like the one of you best. ;3 I on went on Amazon and bought the book too. It sounds good. >:3
I can fully relate. But for me I think I'm drawn to the art and open and loving community most.
Well, this makes for an interesting piece. I'm sure that these portraits would prove useful to the book you contributed towards. Because, here in this 3x3 grid, you've taken various species of animal and given them different occupations. I feel that this strongly emphasizes the individuality of "furries" like all human beings (and, of course, all living things).
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