yesterday I had a present expecting me on my email inbox..!
my beautiful lover has given me a present; my own Furry.
*to get a commission done from my boyfriend please go to:*
http://lusoskav.deviantart. com/
*to get a commission done from my boyfriend please go to:*
we talked about it, and he finally found time to do mine.
he does this type of work and much more elaborated scenarios as commissioned by his clients.
and I can tell you, that he does everything you can come up with.
everything.
my cute little alter ego has elements of an arctic fox, an okapi and some goat/deer type animals.
so here's some inspiration:
he does this type of work and much more elaborated scenarios as commissioned by his clients.
and I can tell you, that he does everything you can come up with.
everything.
my cute little alter ego has elements of an arctic fox, an okapi and some goat/deer type animals.
so here's some inspiration:
the Okapi
"The name "okapi" is a portmanteau of two Lese words, oka, a verb meaning to cut and kpi, a noun referring to the design made on Efé arrows by wrapping the arrow with bark so as to leave stripes when scorched by fire. The stripes on the legs of the okapi resemble these stripes on the arrow shafts. Lese legend says the okapi decorates itself with these stripes, adding to the okapi's great camouflage."
- Wikipedia
the Arctic fox
"The arctic fox has a circumpolar range, meaning that it is found
throughout the entire Arctic, including the outer edges of Greenland,
Russia, Canada, Alaska, and Svalbard, as well as in Subarctic and alpine areas, such as Iceland and mainland alpine Scandinavia.
The conservation status of the species is good, except for the
Scandinavian mainland population. It is acutely endangered there,
despite decades of legal protection from hunting and persecution. The
total population estimate in all of Norway, Sweden and Finland is a mere
120 adult individuals."
-Wikipedia
the deer alike
"The word "deer" was originally broad in meaning, but became more specific over time. In Middle English der (Old English dēor) meant a wild animal of any kind. This was as opposed to cattle, which then meant any sort of domestic livestock that was easy to collect and remove from the land, from the idea of personal-property ownership (rather than real estate property) and related to modern chattel (property) and capital.[1] Cognates of Old English dēor in other dead Germanic languages have the general sense of "animal", such as Old High German tior, Old Norse djur or dȳr, Gothic dius, Old Saxon dier, and Old Frisian diar."
-Wikipedia
gorgeous animals, mixed with fantastical imagination... it can only go right. <3
-Wikipedia
the deer alike
"The word "deer" was originally broad in meaning, but became more specific over time. In Middle English der (Old English dēor) meant a wild animal of any kind. This was as opposed to cattle, which then meant any sort of domestic livestock that was easy to collect and remove from the land, from the idea of personal-property ownership (rather than real estate property) and related to modern chattel (property) and capital.[1] Cognates of Old English dēor in other dead Germanic languages have the general sense of "animal", such as Old High German tior, Old Norse djur or dȳr, Gothic dius, Old Saxon dier, and Old Frisian diar."
-Wikipedia
gorgeous animals, mixed with fantastical imagination... it can only go right. <3
Cool very cool... I see your boyfriend work and is adorable, I like this draws and all that details... my animal as the fennec fox, cause of this I have this derby name WILD FOXX... One of my pasions are this little cute and faster foxes... xoxo
ReplyDelete