tegerio's kangaroo gal Kangy runs and is the founder of The Human Lover's Club, a fine establishment where furry, scaly and finny gals can come and be appreciated* by curiously flat-faced, furless ape-descendants. Frieda's a recent arrival in town, and she'd heard a lot about the Club. So she decided to drop by one night, wearing something appropriate and easily removed. Kangy's quite intrigued by the newcomer's markings, and why not? Frieda's father was a skunk.
*("Appreciated?" Is that what they're calling it now?)
Frieda is ©
Walt46Kangy and art are by
tegerio
Category Artwork (Digital) / General Furry Art
Species Kangaroo
Size 664 x 1000px
File Size 77.3 kB
Aaah cool!
I have a character from waaaay back that is one of these little cuties:
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/.....ck_Wallaby.jpg
I have a character from waaaay back that is one of these little cuties:
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/.....ck_Wallaby.jpg
I've been trying to find the dailies myself. A number of different companies (e.g., Taschen, Fantagraphics) have published collections of the Sundays; I personally have the three-volume hardcover set from Fantagraphics. I ordered The George Herriman Library: Krazy & Ignatz 1916-1918 and 1919-1921 (also Sundays only); we'll see what the quality is like.
I can't find any comprehensive collections of dailies. I have Fantagraphics' The Kat Who Walked In Beauty, but again, it's less than a single year: 1920. There are also some one-year reprints but they're small and more early-1920s stuff. Amazon offers Krazy Kat - Dailies Nov. 1913 - Feb. 1914, but it's only three months and 60 pages for $50(!).
By the way: I own a copy of Krazy Kat: A Novel in Five Panels by Jay Cantor. I can boil my online review down to a single word: awful. He turns the main characters into Humans by the end, and the results are appalling. Read several reviews before buying it, if you don't already own it.
I can't find any comprehensive collections of dailies. I have Fantagraphics' The Kat Who Walked In Beauty, but again, it's less than a single year: 1920. There are also some one-year reprints but they're small and more early-1920s stuff. Amazon offers Krazy Kat - Dailies Nov. 1913 - Feb. 1914, but it's only three months and 60 pages for $50(!).
By the way: I own a copy of Krazy Kat: A Novel in Five Panels by Jay Cantor. I can boil my online review down to a single word: awful. He turns the main characters into Humans by the end, and the results are appalling. Read several reviews before buying it, if you don't already own it.
FA+
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