Art Dump, 4/14/2024

This is for one of my oldest friends in the furry fandom (I was penpals with her when LiveJournal was still a thing), and while we had our…disagreements, we were (mostly) on good terms.

I had done this for her as a birthday gift last year. She appreciated it when I showed it to her on FurAffinity, and another friend noted that she was surprised, given her ideological leanings (since many furs don’t like their fursonas depicted in…certain outfits, as I learned many times the hard way). Even if Reaux (the giftee) wasn’t sincere in appreciating my artwork, she was nice, so that sits well with me.

Some other art…

Been messing around with ideological art lately. Someone on DeviantArt thought my own political leanings were…vague, and I’ll acknowledge that I have strong beliefs in many directions, and as a result, I really don’t fit in perfectly with any specific ideology, party, or whatever.

Anyway, here’s the first.

My Christian views, as well.

And part of a new series I’m starting, called “Insanity is…”

Insanity is…

Art Dump, 2/29/2024

Digital Art

Since it’s a leap year day, I created a yearling boy scout horse character. Yeah.

AI Art


DreamUp

I bought DeviantArt PRO+ since I’ve become an AI art junkie and I’ll try to see if I can’t make any money off of whatever AI art I create (though I know you can’t do so with Bing Create images). Today’s DreamUp theme was “leap” so I made wallpaper of purple bunnies leaping. I tried various features with anthro art, even with the “Anthro” category activated and several “negative” prompts attempted, but most of it turned out looking weird, and the system seems to really struggle when it comes to things like certain types of uniforms and hats (like campaign hats, which Bing Create seems much better at).

AI Fursona Generator (Perchance)

Another AI platform that really seems to struggle when it comes to specific uniforms and hats, but it’s good for exotic designs, so I decided to make adoptables out of these on DeviantArt, and I Googled and nothing says I can’t not do so as is the case with Bing Create.


Bing Image Creator

I really went medieval when it came to Bing Create images today since I wanted to redo older prompts adding the term “anthropomorphic” in addition to 1920s-era Boy Scout uniforms, and I think they really made a world of difference.

Art Dump, 2/28/2024

AI Art

Today was National Pink Shirt Day in Canada, so I decided to AI-generate some pink bunny Mounties.

Digital Art

On the same theme, I depicted the Pink Panther as a Mountie as well, using elements of my anthro style.
This is for a friend’s friend who celebrated his 25th heavenly birthday today, had a wolf fursona, and was from Spain.

Art Dump, 2/26/2024

AI Art

The 25th was Soviet Occupation Day in Georgia (the country, not the U.S. State), so I AI-generated some Soviet Navy bunnies.
Today is Carnival Day, so here are some carnival barker bunnies.

Digital Art

Old birthday art for Kalika, a furry artist I’ve known since my early days in the fandom, side-by-side with newer digital art I did for her recently.

Yesterday was also the birthday of a DeviantArt user who really loves Polly Polaris, one of the four current mascots for the Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters baseball team in Japan, and I thought her design really cute, so I decided to do fanart with elements of my own style (i.e. referencing the faces of real-life squirrels).

Birthday art for Menkaure, one of the first members of the fandom I communicated with online in the 2000s. 

Art Dump, 2/24/2024

Today was Mexican Flag Day, so I AI-generated some mariachi bunnies: 

I also did this Day of the Dead-themed birthday gift art for Peaches the Wolf, an artist I admire on FurAffinity and DeviantArt, and she loves Halloween themes.

Art Dump, 2/16/2024

Today is the first day of Girl Scout Cookie Weekend, so I did a Girl Scouting theme with my daily AI art:

There were two others, but they only featured humans, so I ditched them.

Now for the artwork that I did myself on FireAlpaca:

Basically the female equivalent of my MC (hare/cat hybrid) in a retro Girl Scout troop leader uniform. I listened to ragtime music, popular in the 1910s, while I was doing this.

Art Dump, 2/11/2024

AI art I generated because today was Armed Forces Day. The extra fifth one was the result of an initial attempt that was taking too long with a different prompt that got me the others.

Digital art I did myself, a redesign of my rabbit OC.

Year-End Art Memes

I’ll try to make it a new year’s resolution to post some of my art here, but here are some memes I did today that demonstrate what I can do artistically. In particular, discovering FireAlpaca’s symmetry feature made doing anthro art a lot easier.

Ember’s End

Ember's End (The Green Ember, #4)Ember’s End by S.D. Smith
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

The final entry of author S.D. Smith’s Green Ember series opens with a rogue rabbit, Tameth Seer, vowing vengeance upon Picket Longtreader, whom he dubs as “Kingslayer” due to his alleged involvement in the death of Prince Bleston, and the princess Emma, whom he sees as “the Red Witch.” Picket and company travel to the Harbone Citadel, which the antagonistic army of birds of prey and wolves have decimated, with casualties on both sides of the conflict. Picket and Heather’s Uncle Wilfred rallies the forces of good, with Lord Morbin doing the same, wanting the good lagomorphs to suffer.

Meanwhile, Picket’s sister Heather Longtreader is trapped with her regal rabbit friend Small, both feeling that they won’t make it out of their possible tomb. The rabbits gain intelligence from an enemy prisoner of war, and there is a bit of a role for special flowers known as True Blue. Dragons also play some part in the narrative, with a keeper antagonizing Heather and Smalls when they meet him. Several battles and occasional twists round out the events of the fourth and last Green Ember book, with the latter chapters occurring a year after the events of the war, the fates of characters resolved.

All in all, I definitely relished in experiencing Smith’s Green Ember series, given its well-development animal characters and plenty of action with battles that often last several chapters. However, it does somewhat have the same issues as Brian Jacques’ Redwall series, where the birds of prey and wolves the author depicts are inherently evil, although there’s plenty of gray area for the rabbits, whose alignment varies. Though children are the target audience for the series, as an adult I found the political and military overtones intriguing, and would easily recommend the books to mainstream audiences.

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