"It is made up of fur or similar fur (wikifur.org," fur ") These items are known as fur fans, with the focus of the well-known polar subculture caste. Members of hairy fans often call it "fleece." This idea has changed; the two main changes are "scary" and "bird" that are interested in scale and wing creatures, respectively. "Fans like fur are fans of fictional personified characters with character and character (Wikipedia.org," Furry like Fundum ").
Hairy fans, also known as Furrydom, furridom, fur fandom, or furdom, are fans of literature, art and entertainment like fur. Hairy fans are also used to refer to general fans of art forms like networks, artists, writers, role players and furs gathered at conferences. Like hairy fans, furs, furs or fur members known as fur-like fans, especially media including fictitious personified personality and fictional anthropomorphic characters. Examples of anthropomorphic attributes include expressing human wisdom and expression, ability to speak, walking with two feet, and dressing.
Fans like fur is a subculture that is interested in the imaginary anthropomorphic role of human personality and personality. Fur like fans are also used to point people gathering on the Internet and at conferences. From fairs and conference attendees, or a series of portraits about people and their hobbies. Junius of the WIRED Rawfile blog believes that Dionysius will not take him out of a helicopter. "These people hate enough to put their time, energy or money into the art of fans who hate and hate me and other people," he said. But the image is so threatening that he and others feel that Dionysius and alt-furies should not be allowed to participate in the celebration of a flower shop. On Twitter, Junius posted an old picture of a squat man, Dionysius, wearing a Carolina Panthers jersey. "For public safety, if you meet this truck or this person, please report it to the staff."
In the early stages of Furry Fandom, fans were gathering at SF, fantasy, comic conventions, but after that, a serious party opened a full-fledged meeting. Fans like fur dates back to the 1980 science fiction conference where Steve Garaki's albedo art picture started to discuss the role of anthropomorphism in science fiction. Discussion Group Competition