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[–] [email protected] 3 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

Tons, and cinnamon, flour, and a little bit of salt. I find that the bread dilutes the flavor, so i overload the batter to compensate.

I don't like bland french toast

[–] [email protected] 11 points 10 months ago (8 children)

First thing i did, while my mouth was still salty from the first bite, is go get my sharpie.

Never again

[–] [email protected] 10 points 10 months ago

There's a 1% chance that the weird cousin who never comes to family gatherings might be a furry. That's absolutely it.

The idea of having hobbies in common with family members seems alien to me - which i think, to quote the meme phrase, Says A Lot About Society.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 11 months ago

They can be fun as you play with your fursona, you're connecting with them by performing their species' stereotypes. But nobody takes them too seriously and they're dropped as soon as they go against something you wanted to do. Or they should be.

There's also a lot of character traits that 'feel right' even if they're not stereotypical, and i'm not just talking about subverting expectations. Lions IRL can be goofy, we've all seen them do something stupid in a documentary or whatever, so a goofy lion character feels fresh and truthful at the same time.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 11 months ago (1 children)

Circa 2010 i was feverishly googling “tiger girl” looking for pictures of elvish girl in the forest with her pet tiger, you know, that kind of fantasy art; and i found some obscure forum where someone posted a furry drawing of a tiger girl, and someone commented ‘can someone please draw a furry that isn’t trying to be sexy’, and i’m like ‘what’s a furry’

And i've been circling around the fandom ever since. A couple things happened to make me join: more SFW spaces opened up in the fandom, i got less sex negative anyway, and i dropped out of concept art school so i had nothing to do with myself anymore.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 11 months ago

Just like last time, i think there's basically no chance that this really is a furry hacker group. I don't have any educated guesses for why they're saying so.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I'm an artist, aka unemployed with a hobby.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Well i do notice a discrepancy there: 385 say they do art full time, but only 189 say that they do it for more than 30 hours a week.

But honestly, whether we compare it to 385 or 189, 33 is still a minuscule number regardless. And then you look at the prices of comissions under different parameters (auction, non-auction, how many characters, YCH).

I really hope that there's some kind of selection bias, for example maybe this survey reached smaller artists more, or the least productive artists had more time to answer a random survey, or something

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago (3 children)

Do most artists draw art without expecting any money?

Definitely amateur artists don't expect money, but as you get better and more popular people tend to start offering money. The furry fandom is more serious about this than other online spaces, they pay more and will rarely ask for free art.

Do most artists do it as a side hustle in addition to a regular job? Is that exhausting?

Artists very often have a day job, but we as the audience are more likely to notice full-time artists because they tend to be more active and prolific. Being a more popular artist makes it easier to make it a full-time job, and making it their full-time job makes it easier to get popular.

What sort of “salary” could one reasonably expect from being dedicated to full-time drawing [furry] art?

Oh there was a survey going around on this topic actually. Behold, graphs and a spreadsheet. Most artists i know are broke.

If it’s meant to be your only source of income, how does your job security feel?

It's kind of a dream job and a lot of people want it, so supply is high and it can be hard to pay the rent with this. The quality standards are also pretty high. Add the fact that the economy isn't doing great and a lot of people don't have means to pay for as much art as they'd like. So no, i wouldn't guess it's a stable income.

Is it required to “get lucky”/“get noticed” in order to make any real amount of money?

My optimistic opinion is that putting out quality art consistently over time will get you noticed no matter what; i don't think luck is a factor, if the goal is profitability then catering to the audience's tastes is much more important.

The hard part is making quality art consistently. For one thing, not everyone lives in suitable conditions to work from home, that kind of luck is a factor.

If by "get noticed" you mean "get promoted by bigger artists", then yeah that helps a lot, but it's also possible to just grow on your own.

Is it fun, or does it become “work”?

It becomes work. Starting a drawing is a lot easier than finishing it, so it definitely requires discipline and work ethic.

But also, the kind of people with the inclination to draw for 8 hours a day are absolutely passionate about art and would do it anyway; and making art of a high enough quality to make a living requires the kind of practice that comes from drawing for 8 hours a day.

Any other interesting topics that I don’t know enough about to ask?

It's relatively common for artists to not consider themselves furry, but they draw anthros and therefore have a furry audience. Membership in the community is not required, all that is required is anthro animals.

But, when it comes to making a living, i do think it takes a furry to know the esthetic expectations and how to subvert them, even with AI art. And a lot of artists stay away from furry because of the negative associations, so competition is not as stiff as it could be. This is especially true for NSFW furry art, that's really a niche where you only go if it's what you're into.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

The stereotype is just too perfect, you know? I'm sure there's a ton of furry hackers, but there's a lot more people who have heard of this stereotype and think it's funny.

I also think furry hackers would target the Repuclican National Convention or something

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

It is not technologically possible to verify an internet user's identity, there's always a way to bypass it. Best you can do is raise the barrier to entry, which is definitely something but is not equal to it being impossible.

Having said that, if it was possible to verify an internet user's identity, it would be necessary to make it illegal. Age verification being possible at all would be a disaster, we would need to invent ways to make it impossible so the internet can continue to exist.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I did find a KazuK9 on Twitter, but i scrolled really far down their media tab and didn't see the tweet in this screenshot. Either they deleted it or it's an older meme. I did see a lot of furry femboy paws though.

Searching Faruk Kazuk with no other indication returned a lot of turkish-looking men.

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