A furry convention is for the fans get together to buy and sell artwork, participate in workshops, wear costumes, and socialize. Sufficient interest and membership has enabled the creation of many furry conventions in North America and Europe. įurry fans prepare for a race at Midwest FurFest 2006 Rabbit and Friends and the Funday PawPet Show, and create furry accessories, such as ears or tails. įurry fans also pursue puppetry, recording videos and performing live shows such as Rapid T. Some fans may also wear "partial" suits consisting simply of ears and a tail, or a head, paws, and a tail.
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While about 80% of furries do not own a full fursuit, often citing their expensive cost as the decisive factor, a majority of them hold positive feelings towards fursuiters and the conventions in which they participate. Fursuits range in price from $500, for mascot-like designs, to an upwards of $10,000 for models incorporating animatronics. Fursuits range from designs featuring simple construction and resembling sports mascots to those with more sophisticated features that include moving jaw mechanisms, animatronic parts, prosthetic makeup, and other features. Craftsįans with craft skills create their own plush toys, sometimes referred to as plushies, and also build elaborate costumes called fursuits, which are worn for fun or to participate in parades, convention masquerades, dances, or fund-raising charity events (as entertainers). The furry fandom is male-dominated, with surveys reporting around 80% male respondents. ActivitiesĪccording to a survey from 2008, most furries believe that visual art, conventions, literature, and online communities are strongly important to the fandom. A survey conducted in 2007 suggested that, when compared with a non-furry control group, a higher proportion of those self-identifying as furries liked cartoons "a great deal" as children and recalled watching them significantly more often, as well as being more likely to enjoy works of science fiction than those outside of the community.
InspirationĪllegorical novels, including works of both science fiction and fantasy, and cartoons featuring anthropomorphic animals are often cited as the earliest inspiration for the fandom.
The newsgroup was created in November 1990, and virtual environments such as MUCKs also became popular places on the internet for fans to meet and communicate. The next decade, the internet became accessible to the general population and became the most popular means for furry fans to socialize.
It was called Confurence 0, and was held at the Holiday Inn Bristol Plaza in Costa Mesa, California. By 1989, there was sufficient interest to stage the first furry convention. ĭuring the 1980s, furry fans began to publish fanzines, developing a diverse social group that eventually began to schedule social gatherings. Internet newsgroup discussion in the 1990s created some separation between fans of " funny animal" characters and furry characters, meant to avoid the baggage that was associated with the term "furry". However, fans consider the origins of furry fandom to be much earlier, with fictional works such as Kimba, the White Lion, released in 1965, Richard Adams' novel Watership Down, published in 1972 (and its 1978 film adaptation), as well as Disney's Robin Hood as oft-cited examples. The specific term furry fandom was being used in fanzines as early as 1983, and had become the standard name for the genre by the mid-1990s, when it was defined as "the organized appreciation and dissemination of art and prose regarding 'Furries', or fictional mammalian anthropomorphic characters". This led to the formation of a discussion group that met at science fiction conventions and comics conventions. Vootie grew a small following over the next several years, and its contributors began meeting at science fiction and comics conventions.Īccording to fandom historian Fred Patten, the concept of furry originated at a science fiction convention in 1980, when a character drawing from Steve Gallacci's Albedo Anthropomorphics started a discussion of anthropomorphic characters in science fiction novels. Many of its featured works contained adult themes, such as "Omaha" the Cat Dancer, which contained explicit sex. In 1976, a pair of cartoonists created the amateur press association Vootie, which was dedicated to animal-focused art. The furry fandom has its roots in the underground comix movement of the 1970s, a genre of comic books that depicts explicit content.