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Wasn't satisfied with a screenshot from secondlife.. So I spiced it up a bit. (Before & After)
Doodle, anyone? What should I name him?
Fuzzy dragon character auction (More info in comments~)
I recently made 5 dragon designs inspired by the chinese elements so I decided to do something different this time.
I thought they came out cute, especially their faces.
Let me know what you think :3
submitted by FuzzyKrogan[link] [2 comments]
Episode 91 – Fuzz Rage - Aloha fluffies! This is fuzzy logic comin’ at ya with episode 91! FUZZ RAGE! We regret that an Isty could not be present tonight as the mothership had beamed him up for his 150,000 mile tune up. Discussions included Smo[...]

Aloha fluffies! This is fuzzy logic comin’ at ya with episode 91! FUZZ RAGE!
We regret that an Isty could not be present tonight as the mothership had beamed him up for his 150,000 mile tune up.
Discussions included Smokey mentioning an instance of managing his anger successfully at work,
Kyo converting to believing in the power of e-cigarettes,
And Halfwit mentioning her chiropractory adventures as well as the relationship between sexism and flat tires.
We also went on an awful lot about other things, but we tend to do that anyway.
Our first email is from a relatively new fan, (Tow-bow-eh), and how he has actually remixed Orange Juice (yo). We put it at the beginning of the music break, and linked here in the show notes.
Next Ryo writes in again talking about how he de-stresses after dealing with the crazies, among his methods are lots of violent video games (fuck you Jack Thompson).
Next is Rennec with a story about how his anger adversely affected his schooling and even his physical health, showing just how important controlling anger can be.
Last is Legionbunny offering his own two cents about his ways of dealing with anger, though we cannot necessarily recommend them for everyone… seriously, be careful about that mine shaft.
Next show is a chance to brag! What are you proud of? What’s something going on or that you’ve accomplished that you don’t want to talk about too much usually because you worry people will think you’re full of yourself? Tell us! Sometimes it’s healthy to stroke your own ego a little!
We hope we have an Isty next time, but that depends on if the mothership needs extra time to change out his fluids.
Write in!
If you know anyone in a bad situation and think they’re contemplating something terrible, don’t hesitate to give them the number in this tweet: Isty tweets the suicide hotline phone number. Pass it around. It might save someone’s life.
Toboe remixes “Orange Juice, Yo!” – in various formats. (Sorry Toboe, the link you sent in the second email didn’t seem to work!)
Music Break: Natalia Kills – Kill My Boyfriend
Episode Summary Music: Hollywood Holiday – From Ren & Stempy Production Music
Episode 91 – Fuzz Rage - Aloha fluffies! This is fuzzy logic comin’ at ya with episode 91! FUZZ RAGE! We regret that an Isty could not be present tonight as the mothership had beamed him up for his 150,000 mile tune up. Discussions included Smo[...]Animation: ‘The Last Flight of the Champion’
I heard posting Pumzie earns you Karma.
Out of the Shadows and Into Your Game Console
The pizza-loving ninja-boys are back, in a brand new game created by Red Fly Studios and published by Activision. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows is a down-loadable game based largely on the current hit TMNT series on Nickelodeon, as well as the original comics of course. A 4-person co-op game (convenient huh?), it also features an optional 2-player off-line mode. It was released on August 28 for Xbox Live Arcade and Steam, and it will be released on September 24 for PlayStation Network. There’s a preview video of the game currently making the rounds on YouTube. You can also check out the game’s official page on Facebook.

image c. 2013 Activision
Did someone say more Pumzie?! (I think this week should be adorable fursuit photos week)
FreeFall Racers First Look, Features Flying Squirrels!
Ever dreamed of being a flying squirrel? Able to soar through the treetops, experiencing everything that thrill can offer? Probably not, but now you can do just that with the upcoming game being published by Deep Silver, FreeFall Racers.
The game features nine different flying squirrel characters to choose from. Players can steer them through varied tracks, controlling them with their body moves via Kinect. The game will be available exclusively on the Xbox Live® online entertainment network from Microsoft for $9.99
Check out the first look video below and let us know what you think!
If anyone remembers that 'True Tails' post from a couple days ago... I made something inspired by it.
A "furry" is scheduled to make an appearance on NatGeo's "Border Security" tonight (See episode 2014)
Good drawing programs?
Price isn't a problem just i already tried Photoshop and i don't like it, but i got SAI paint tool and just wondering if there is anything better out there?
submitted by russkiepon3[link] [8 comments]
EDM Composer Is Feeling the Pain of Criticism
Students celebrate furry culture through art

Here is an article, of August 28, in the student newspaper of Ball State University (in Muncie, Indiana, USA):
http://www.bsudailynews.com/Content/News/News/Article/Students-celebrate-furry-culture-through-art/1/15/39895
http://www.bsudailynews.com/Content/Default/Homepage-Rotator/Article/Students-celebrate-furry-culture-through-art/-3/8/39909
The article contains comments from fursuiter Albert "Seneca" DiBenedetto, Anthropomorphic Art Society President Vance Yaunt, artist Shawna Gardner, and Brock Goodwin.
Albert DiBenedetto entered room 301 in the Student Center dressed in all black. From the tips of his Belgian shepherd ears, to the hem of his dark, denim jeans, DiBenedetto was engulfed in his fursuit.
A fursuit is an animal costume that directly represents his furry persona, or fursona.
His black shirt blended into the black fur of his headpiece and fur covered paws. Adding color to his fursuit is the white border around his eyes, and a plush taco, an accessory DiBenedetto is rarely seen without.
“[The taco] doesn’t really hold a meaning beyond the fact that I just really enjoy tacos,” DiBenedetto said. “It’s just a part of my fursona.”
DiBenedetto, a junior physics major, is a member of Ball State’s Anthropomorphic Art Society (AAS), a club of artists and art enthusiasts who meet weekly to discuss anthropomorphic art.
Anthropomorphic art combines animal and human qualities. Tracing history back as far as the Egyptian’s hieroglyphics of deities with human bodies and animal heads, it’s hard to pinpoint an origin of this art. The history and impact it has on society is one aspect that AAS discusses in its weekly meetings.
The first club meeting had less than 10 people sitting around a small table. Since then, the club tripled their numbers with more than 30 people showing up regularly to weekly meetings.
“The main goal of the club to get together, learn a little bit and discuss the art,” AAS President Vance Yaunt said. “We are such a unique group of people with very different reasons why we love anthropomorphic art.”
After learning about furry culture from a past girlfriend, DiBenedetto started out dipping his toes into the fandom by building his fursona his freshman year of college. It wasn’t until the beginning of August that he started fursuiting as Seneca, the name of his fursona.
DiBenedetto spent months coming up with a story and concept for his fursona. He described Seneca as being “very derpy and goofy” while being “incredibly personable and caring.”
He then started figuring out how much it would cost to get a partial fursuit complete with head, paws and feet. After asking around and coming up with the best price for the quality, he spent roughly $900 on his partial fursuit.
A full body fursuit can range in price anywhere from $1,500 to $3,000. After he paid the fursuit creator, he stayed in contact to give insight to his fursona.
After months of planning, pricing and waiting, DiBenedetto received his fursuit in the mail on the morning of Aug. 9.
“When it arrived I pulled it out of the box and immediately put it on,” he said. “I was going to a convention that day, so I really got to put the suit to good use just hours after receiving it.”
His first day in the fursuit, DiBenedetto spent eight hours walking through lobbies and hallways at the convention guided by his handler, someone who helps fursuiters navigate while they are in costume because their vision and range of motion is confined.
He quickly realized how hot the suit can get.
“I definitely sweat a lot in the suit,” DiBenedetto said. “A lot more than I anticipated, but it is well worth it.”
He became a fan of the Headless Lounge, a cool-down room for fursuiters to take off their costume heads and relax.
While DiBenedetto was proudly displaying his new fursuit, Shawna Gardner, a senior art major, was selling her art at the convention’s Artist Alley, which is a place to sell personalized art and network with furry fans.
Gardner has turned her love for anthropomorphic art into a business.
Selling her art to a specific group of people has given Gardner the opportunity to raise her prices and make money through an outlet that she is passionate about.
“Depending on the size of the convention I can walk away selling 16 to 29 different pieces a day,” Gardner said. “It not only gives me the opportunity sell my art, but to continually challenge myself to make something different.”
Gardner started AAS her first semester at Ball State in 2009. She wanted to start something where lovers of the art could meet, create and discuss the different aspects of anthropomorphic art.
“It’s kind of my joy and my treasure, I’ve loved watching it grow and seeing everyone in it,” Gardner said.
To many in the club, it is more than something to do on Thursday nights, it is a place for them to be themselves and meet people they can connect with. For Brock Goodwin, a junior urban planning major, it was an added bonus to his transfer from Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology in Terre Haute, Ind.
Goodwin knew about the club before his transfer, and made sure he attended all the meetings he could as soon as he became a Cardinal.
“It’s a place for us to get together and share something we all love, and in turn find a community that is 100 percent accepting of everyone,” Goodwin said.
The club is out to combat the negative connotation associated with fursuiters.
“We have this link with being a sexual group of people, and it is not true,” Goodwin said. “We have been trying to pull away from that image, and show people that we focus on expressing ourselves through art, not sex.”
AAS meets at 9 p.m. every Thursday in the Student Center. Check out its Facebook for more info about meetings at facebook.com/BallStateAAS.