HoshiNoSuzie

joined 2 years ago
[–] [email protected] 7 points 2 years ago

Looks awesome! I love the perspective and the color choices.

 

Having a virtual pet fursona is fun! In a way, you get to take care of them by drawing them feeling happy. You also get to doodle them eating all sorts of food and wearing cute outfits!

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 years ago

They're precious!

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 years ago

What a cute bnnuy! I love the digital theme

 

I adopted this adorable octopus bunny at Anthrocon this year in their dealer's den! He's reversible, and the other side is a green/teal tie-die instead of the pink/blue in the image. Both sides have the same expression. My favorite part about him is the pearl beads for blushy cheeks!

 

A few various bunny plushies I've collected over the years, in different styles from different manufacturers. Being a bunny myself, I plan on collecting many more!

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

I (MtF) had drawn up my first bunny sona as a boy when I was still identifying as male and it was years until I realized I was trans yet. He was a femme-looking pink bunny, so it's not like he was the most manly of figures, but still. I wasn't really aware of what that meant in terms of what it was revealing about my inner self. I had created my first other sonas around like...age 14? 15? Most of them were women, and I just thought nothing of it because artists draw women all the time. So, no, my first sona did not start as my preferred gender now.

As time passed and I got older however, I started to become a little more comfortable with expressing and conforming to the feelings and visuals of my gender identity. Eventually, once I started transitioning, I created a female counterpart to my old boy that I use as my primary sona today, and likely will for a long time.

As characters, I consider them (the male and female halves of one central design) to be two separate people, yet they are two sides of the same coin. Despite being a woman today, I don't want to reject or get rid of that old male version of my character since he was an important stepping stone to the comfort I feel within my identity now. I also am still fond of what I created back then in terms of his design and it'd be a shame to ditch him, I think.