
I bet you never thought you'd see me submit something again! BWAHAHAHAHAha... eh, this probably doesn't count though since I didn't draw it, but whatever!
This is part one of a series that I commissioned from Duo Radon. The concept is that these are a series of photographs taken over a matter of a week or so. They're used by lion researchers to help them study food intake of lions in the wild and have a standard for comparison between researchers' notes. It's a legitimate real world research tool. My scale just happens to go up into the preposterous range, because that's the way I like it. I hope people can overlook the fact that it's not a "fat" "fur" for the fact that he does get fatter, and he has fur.
Artwork by Duo Radon (not me!)
Concept by Noone (me! (also by T.M. Caro, technically. She/he probably never thought it'd be used in such a way though :D ))
This is part one of a series that I commissioned from Duo Radon. The concept is that these are a series of photographs taken over a matter of a week or so. They're used by lion researchers to help them study food intake of lions in the wild and have a standard for comparison between researchers' notes. It's a legitimate real world research tool. My scale just happens to go up into the preposterous range, because that's the way I like it. I hope people can overlook the fact that it's not a "fat" "fur" for the fact that he does get fatter, and he has fur.
Artwork by Duo Radon (not me!)
Concept by Noone (me! (also by T.M. Caro, technically. She/he probably never thought it'd be used in such a way though :D ))
Category Artwork (Digital) / Fat Furs
Species Lion
Size 1280 x 1272px
File Size 264.3 kB
Listed in Folders
Well, despite my best efforts, the entire scale doesn't appear to exist anywhere on the internet. The best explanation for it came out of a book that you can "read" at http://books.google.com/books?id=qO.....U6miY#PPA54,M1
It's "Cheetahs of the Serengeti Plains" by T.M. Caro, which is who I also attributed the idea for this series from, and also paraphrased a couple subheadings from. Hopefully that link works. Apparently if you want to see the actual scale, you just have to know actual big cat researchers or something :-/ . But yeah, that's where it came from.
It's "Cheetahs of the Serengeti Plains" by T.M. Caro, which is who I also attributed the idea for this series from, and also paraphrased a couple subheadings from. Hopefully that link works. Apparently if you want to see the actual scale, you just have to know actual big cat researchers or something :-/ . But yeah, that's where it came from.
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