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Hey furs, I've just created /r/furrywritingprompts!
/r/furrywritingprompts is a place for writers and rp enthusiasts to unleash (haha, leash) their furry side for others to see. Come in, sit back, and let your creative juices flow.
If you want a place to start, I suggest writing a short word poem.
submitted by TyrKiyote[link] [comment]
Hey you lurkers who never post. Make an alt account and come in here and say hi!
Edit: Ignore the alt account thing. Endless questions about it, it was just to encourage those who are nervous because of posting history to come join.
We have how many THOUSANDS of subscribers, and only a handful of them at a time. But at any given time, there are at least a hundred of us online.
I know there are a lot of you who just watch, I did the same. But hanging out here is pretty cool too.
Come say hi, make an alt account if you're nervous! We won't hold it against you
submitted by Sareii[link] [172 comments]
my new fave shirt. i thought it was kinda furry
/r/furry Shall We Play a Game?
I am going to link a ref-sheet of a character of mine in this post. I want you guys to look at that ref-sheet, and give me a one word description of his personality. I already have an idea of his personality, but I am really curious what others think.
Here is the link: https://www.dropbox.com/s/hdhhkpiubb7cq37/cm_taabu_full.jpg?dl=0
submitted by lbbfur[link] [14 comments]
Anyone want some stories written about them?
so, i have been way to un-productive. and ive just been sitting here. so i need to get out of the gutter and start doing something. so i figured why not do something fun, writing!
now lets start with what im going to do. im gonna go in a few priorities when it comes to who i will pick. first priority is who got here first. second is how much i actually feel like writing a story for him/her. and third how much info on the character i got. if it is an uninteresting character it might get a very small story, however if it is someone interesting i might do alot more.
so, what do i need?
well, a reference sheet is always nice, but a quick summary is all that is required. no need to go "he weighs xlbs" etc etc.(on the other hand, no info is bad per-say, just unecessary) something alot simpler. however! what i really need, and this is the most important one. is how the character is. is he nice or evil? is he thoughtful or sparradic? how does he speak? does he have an extreme accent? maybe he over uses swearwords. so on and so on. i need to get a feel for the character.
if you would like the character to do something, let me know. maybe he is taking down a drug ring or solving a murder? maybe he is taking down trolls or killing dragons? you get the point.
so yeah. tell me all you can and ill see if i cant make ya something. i know all of you guys are so creative! and im sure this will end with me being stressed as F*ck! but happy nevertheless.
submitted by bjorn0411582[link] [6 comments]
Away from my scanner, but I couldn't wait to share. So, sorry for picture quality. [NSFW] - by Moonwalker
What exactly are "otherkin?"
I got caught up in a conversation when someone mentioned them, and I've heard the word "otherkin" flying around before, but I don't know exactly what it means. Are they people who think they really are animals?
submitted by MRjarjarbinks[link] [9 comments]
Jungle Shuffle – CGI Feature announcement by Fred Patten.
Running a test. Tell me your likes and dislikes!
So, while the title is rather descriptive, I figure I could add a bit: I'm conducting a test out of personal curiosity! I'm fairly sure I know the answer, but...well, results are better than conjecture. Therefore, tell me a little about yourself! Likes, dislikes, anything! Be as specific as you like! Personally, I like music, cooking, reading, writing, and 15-30 Watt lightbulbs in my lamps! I absolutely adore autumn for its colors, temperature, and smells! On the other side, I hate cramped spaces and Apple products. My absolute least favorite thing in the world is ignorance.
So, the purpose of this test is not to see the faces behind the furs, but the thoughts and ideas and all that wonderful brain stuff! Thank you guys in advance~
submitted by Someguyinatuxy[link] [25 comments]
This subreddit really got me!
Im such a gullable dumbass! I was so fooled by this IMVU stuff
submitted by DrScienceBread[link] [9 comments]
From yesterday's doodle requests
I wanted to do more, but as I expected, work picked up shortly after I posted that thread... I was actually about to not post it because I figured that would happen, but eh...
Anyway, I did my best! I need to work on drawing arms and hands. I drew a couple of broken wrists here, haha.
If I didn't doodle you, then I'm going to keep it in mind next time it's a slow work day! That way I have something to fall back to when I run out of ideas, which I tend to do rather quickly...
Here's where I link the furs I doodles so they know I did it! /u/stratathefox, /u/FreeThinkerComic, /u/LightningPaws, /u/Neohexane, /u/spacecoreV8, /u/copperbadger
submitted by IntroIntroduction[link] [3 comments]
So.. I need some request I guess.
So... I recenty got into anime I guess you can say. It started with this Youtube video. I liked his anime he suggested.. I loved Cat Planet Cuties, loved Kanokon, and really love Spice and Wolf. The 3 had a slight level of romance and were not too... sexual about it. Although I was told Kanokon was a cock tease ( did not effect me in that way, but whatever )
My question is... what else is there? Like I want things along these lines... preferably dubbed as Japanese voice acting irritates me sometimes to where it is a turn off on anime. Although I know most anime is subbed first... I have no idea how to say it. I am a little weird about it. If the anime is very well done, the voice acting wont bother me much. Dubbed is not something I want, but will take it into consideration.
Hopefully you can help me out here.
submitted by ZacAttackLeader[link] [4 comments]
Finding Furry Artists - Where do you go to find furry artists? It's been a long time since we last talked about this, and in light of some recent instability and uncertainty of a popular furry art site, we thought it was time to revisit the issue.
Where do you go to find furry artists? It’s been a long time since we last talked about this, and in light of some recent instability and uncertainty of a popular furry art site, we thought it was time to revisit the issue. Where do you like to go to find, post, or commission art? Tell us below!
Metadata and Credits WagzTail Season 3 Episode 64Runtime: 30m
Cast: Firefoxkac, Levi, Wolfin
Editor: Levi
Format: 128kbps ABR split-stereo MP3 Copyright: © 2015 WagzTail.com. Some Rights Reserved. This podcast is released by WagzTail.com as CC BY-ND 3.0. If distributed with a facility that has an existing agreement in place with a Professional Rights Organisation (PRO), file a cue sheet for 30:00 to Fabien Renoult (BMI) 1.67%, Josquin des Pres (BMI) 1.67%, WagzTail.com 96.67%. Rights have been acquired to all content for national and international broadcast and web release with no royalties due. Finding Furry Artists - Where do you go to find furry artists? It's been a long time since we last talked about this, and in light of some recent instability and uncertainty of a popular furry art site, we thought it was time to revisit the issue.
Free to Be Furry? Group Fights to Wear Animal Costumes in Burlington
c/o Mwalimu on Flayrah, here is an article, dated April 1, in Vermont's Seven Days newspaper:
http://www.sevendaysvt.com/vermont/free-to-be-furry-group-fights-to-wear-animal-costumes-in-burlington/Content?oid=2546940
Jessica Owens is 32 years old, lives in Milton and works as a secretary. On a rainy night last week, she agreed to meet at Wicked Wings in Essex Junction. She showed up in a black sweatshirt, but on a different day, might have been dressed in her custom-made corgi suit.
Owens is part of a subculture of people called "furries" who are passionate about anthropomorphized cartoon animals. Conventions across the country attract thousands; many come wearing bespoke hirsute costumes.
Joined at the restaurant by two fellow furries — her husband, Jonathan, and a friend, Rob — Owens explained the particulars of furry culture with the rehearsed manner of someone used to dispelling misconceptions.
No, they don't actually believe they are animals. Yes, they do cultivate "fursonas." Owens explained that she chose a race-car-driving corgi named Rally as hers partly because she shares the breed's outgoing and assertive personality.
"I'm her codriver," her husband chimed in. The 36-year-old, who delivers appliances for a living, identifies as Ahzlon, a black panther with blue hair.
The trio belongs to the Vermont Furs club, which has been around since the early 2000s and has a membership that fluctuates between 20 and 40 people. The local furries get together at bowling alleys and pool halls — sometimes in suits, other times not — and look for opportunities to entertain at events such as charity walks and Christmas-tree lightings.
"We're just here to put smiles on people's faces," Owens said.
Not everyone has been so charmed. In fact, some city authorities seem a little freaked out.
Two months ago, Owens and 11 other furries joined the crowds at Burlington's annual Mardi Gras celebration. Decked out in green, gold and purple beads like the rest of the partygoers, the seven of them in costume high-fived little kids and posed with people in a photo booth on Church Street.
After about an hour and a half, a Church Street Marketplace rep confronted the group outside the mall and requested that they remove their animal heads, because they didn't have permission to perform on Church Street.
Why were they being singled out, the furries wanted to know, when the streets were teeming with other strangely dressed revelers?
"It's just different," was the response, Owens said.
Offended, the group walked into an alley, where they removed their masks, or "broke the magic" as they describe it. Later, the Vermont Furs filed a formal complaint with the city, calling the incident an act of "blatant discrimination."
The Church Street Marketplace, which regulates the street, issues permits to people who want to busk on the brick promenade. To make the cut, street performers must audition in front of marketplace staff and pass a background check. Vermont Furs had a permit, but it expired at the end of last year. When Owens tried to renew it in January, she was told she couldn't yet because the permit system was getting revamped.
As bidden, the Vermont Furs had stayed off Church Street. They showed up at Mardi Gras because they didn't think they'd be breaking any rules.
Ron Redmond is the executive director of the marketplace. Asked about the incident, his response was simple: Google "Elmo" and "Times Square."
The first result was a New York Post story headlined "Elmo in Handcuffs After Times Square Bust." A woman wearing an Elmo suit had been arrested for aggressive panhandling. Elmo wasn't the only character to act out. In June, two different Spider-Man look-alikes were taken into custody on charges of groping and assaulting women. A Cookie Monster allegedly shoved a child and ... you get the idea.
Redmond's point: Fear of the big, fluffy creatures isn't totally irrational. He stressed that marketplace staff have a responsibility to the public to keep the pedestrian mall safe, which requires vetting all performers. "It's become a national issue where, in some cities, people dress up in these outfits and aren't necessarily doing it to connect with children," he explained.
The Vermont Furs club is a different breed than the panhandling denizens of Times Square. The former belong to a tradition that dates back at least to the 1980s and grew out of science-fiction and anime fandoms. When out in public, they abide by certain rules. They're always accompanied by a non-costumed "handler," and they bend down rather than tower over small children so as not to intimidate them. Owens emphatically pointed out that they never accept cash.
"We're just like other fandoms except we're cuter, furrier and we do it for free," she said.
It hasn't helped the cause that several stories have linked furries to plushophilia — an attraction to stuffed animals — and other sexual fetishes. "It's a stigma we've dealt with for a very, very long time," Owens said. "As with any fandom, regardless if you're 'Star Trek' fans, My Little Pony fans, those romantic themes are out there." For Vermont Furs, and for the majority of furries, Owens continued, sex has nothing to do with it.
"We know they are really, genuinely good people," Redmond said of the Vermont Furs. Pointing out that the marketplace sometimes hires high school students to dress up as Frosty the Snowman or other characters, he stressed that they've got nothing against costumed creatures per se. Regarding the Mardi Gras situation, he admitted, "I'm not sure if that was the right move."
In Redmond's opinion, furries don't really fit the street-performer category, which puts them in a regulatory gray area. "It's an interesting and complex issue," he noted.
Even before the furry quandary, the marketplace had decided to revisit its street-performer system in response to complaints from "our more successful street performers," Redmond said. Under the current arrangement, he estimates that roughly 95 percent of people pass their auditions. As a result, an abundance of performers crowd the street, sometimes creating sonic overload. The likely solution: more rigorous auditions.
Church Street is the commercial lifeblood of Burlington, and its custodians are understandably concerned about preserving its charm. But some residents have criticized several recent policies — a smoking ban and a no-trespass ordinance allowing police officers to ban unruly people from the promenade — as overzealous attempts to sanitize the place. For some, raising the bar for street performers could carry the same whiff of elitism. How will those in charge address the concern? "It's a great question. I don't know the answer, but we've got to find the answer," Redmond said.
If there's a stricter audition process, will the furries — whose repertoire consists of high-fives rather than fancy tricks — make the cut?
Redmond said the marketplace is committed to carving out space for them; they just need some time to figure it out. One solution, he suggested, would be to give registered furries a badge or a pin with Church Street insignia showing that they've cleared the same background checks street performers undergo.
In the meantime, the Vermont Furs members are frustrated. Places like Essex Junction have welcomed them with open arms, but "at this point, the entire city of Burlington is off-limits to us."
The problem is not just on Church Street. For years, furries did their thing in Burlington, undisturbed, amusing people at events such as the weekly farmers market in City Hall Park. But last summer, a police officer notified one of them that the city of Burlington's mask ordinance forbade that kind of attire. Perplexed, Owens went in person to the police department.
She found out Queen City regulations favor the underdressed over the overdressed. It's perfectly legal to parade around in the buff, but Burlington prohibits anyone over 21 from wearing a mask in public. The ban dates back to the days of the Ku Klux Klan, according to the Vermont Historical Society. In 1924, the hate group burned crosses on Lake Champlain's breakwater, and city officials passed the ordinance to prevent anything similar. The police department continues to enforce the ban, largely because people often wear masks when committing crimes.
"I'm, like, OK, well how does the didgeridoo guy with the cat mask get away with it?" Owens remembers asking a police officer, referring to a man she'd seen on Church Street.
The officer explained the street-performer permit system, and Owens later got one for the group.
Deputy police chief Bruce Bovat said he wasn't familiar with the incident — or the furries. He noted that officers only apply the ordinance within reason. But Bovat declined to weigh in on whether the ordinance should apply to furries — "I'm wary to put something out there that's so black-and-white."
For the Owenses, being furry is a social thing. The couple has traveled to conventions, and they love being a part of the community.
Their friend, Rob, has never been to one. The 35-year-old auto parts salesman and backyard mechanic was quieter than his two companions. He's been a furry since age 15, but he didn't want to be identified because he's never told his family and doubts it would go over well.
Rob doesn't have a suit, but he's refurbished an old Ford Escort to resemble his fursona — a zebra with white stripes on black named Zytx. "I am terribly shy. Just coming down here tonight I got the shakes," he admitted, raising his hands to demonstrate. His fursona and his friends in Vermont Furs force him out of his shell.
The Owens talked about hosting a convention that even Rob would attend — one right here in Burlington. They already have a name: Green Mountain Fur Con.
But given the current situation, they know that for now, it's just a fantasy.