I take an extensive look at people's artwork and how they provoke emotion and character and that's more of thrill to me, furry or not.
The pinups I've done, Chloe, Buzz, Misty, Raven Hunt, and the ones I plan to do are characters their artists breathed life into through their extensive work on who they are, either realistic or raunchy.
I guess the more fully dimensional the character the more erotic to me, again furry or not.
No they don't bother me. I've been traipsing around the Internet since 96 when a Fred Perry's Gold Diggers Fan Site was the closest thing to furry community.
By and large when an artist sets out to create a fully dimensional character, they do it to:
1. Tell a story to people that contains a message they want people to understand.
2. Explore parts of themselves they can't IRL
3. Fill a void that their current lives are missing.
The art they produce is the language they are trying to communicate in. Getting bothered by it would be like getting impatient the first time your child tries to read you a story they made up. I will admit it is harder when all they're doing is filthy, raunchy, gory, going for shock value or gross out. But in that respect if it's something you don't agree about, it is healthier all the way around to take a deep breath and let them go their merry way.
On top of that I know a few people bravely facing the real world as transgendered people. Anyone confident enough with themselves to present themselves in ways against the sociological norm have my respect.
I enjoy real orgasms over fake ones any day.
I take an extensive look at people's artwork and how they provoke emotion and character and that's more of thrill to me, furry or not.
The pinups I've done, Chloe, Buzz, Misty, Raven Hunt, and the ones I plan to do are characters their artists breathed life into through their extensive work on who they are, either realistic or raunchy.
I guess the more fully dimensional the character the more erotic to me, again furry or not.
Oh and Big tits...
In that time I've bumped into most of the fetishes on this chart: http://i31.photobucket.com/albums/c.....fuckisthis.gif
By and large when an artist sets out to create a fully dimensional character, they do it to:
1. Tell a story to people that contains a message they want people to understand.
2. Explore parts of themselves they can't IRL
3. Fill a void that their current lives are missing.
The art they produce is the language they are trying to communicate in. Getting bothered by it would be like getting impatient the first time your child tries to read you a story they made up. I will admit it is harder when all they're doing is filthy, raunchy, gory, going for shock value or gross out. But in that respect if it's something you don't agree about, it is healthier all the way around to take a deep breath and let them go their merry way.
On top of that I know a few people bravely facing the real world as transgendered people. Anyone confident enough with themselves to present themselves in ways against the sociological norm have my respect.