"Winter" - Hamilton, ON
Listed as a "rabbit" but I'm pretty sure that's an insect
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Vrooming so fast she lost her legs, her tail, her ears... everything but her Spaniel Eyes and the static electricity.
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draw a circle with legs, arms, head and pretend it’s someone who’s super pregnant.
I can't tell if this was supposed to be a joke ask...
Eh whatever I think I misunderstood the assignment, but I had fun *shrug*
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How can you even be this round
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Learning to Crochet has been fun- espcially with this soft new yarn I got.
We have so much wool yarn at home but it like will cling to itself and the hook could easily end up going between the yarn threads- like it's not bad I just don't care for it much.
Espcially now that I'm gating down some of the basic stitches I just.. have been rotating an idea around.
HIM
So very shape, perfect for Crochet
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i was doodling egghog sonic earlier and kept thinking to myself: he has to be so fucking Round. he has to
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another fucking thing stumping me about Halcandran anatomy: dentition! I know for sure they have flatter, more human-like incisors (important for certain phonemes) and slightly blunter fangs (still prominent when the mouth is open). Carnassials and grinding molars are mutually exclusive, since grinding requires the jaw to be able to move side to side and carnassials actively prevent that to ensure the scissorlike function of the jaw.
Halcandrans descend from magically hybridized animals that are mostly feline with goat traits (if they had kept their legs they'd be cat satyrs) and part of that hybridization resulted in omnivory, and I imagine any plant that lives on Halcandra is pretty damn tough. They definitely pierced fruits and succulent leaves with their fangs though. Multipurpose!
Apparently bears re-evolved molars when they went full omnivore? I still kinda want Halcandran molars to have a little bit of carnassial bladed edge on the outer cusp. I worry that lateral jaw movement is essential for humanlike speech, even though I can't think of a single phoneme that requires it. Halcandrans should at least be able to move their jaw forwards and backwards, even just a little. It could let me have the best of both worlds
Cursory research as I write this reveals to me that both goats and cats have 6 incisors. I think humans would find that a little uncanny at first in an "ohhhh this catgoatperson has almost-human teeth" kinda way. Fun thoughts for first contact! They are a little more humanlike with the whole upright stance and flatter faces, so that dramatic space between canines and molars you see in longer-faced mammals would definitely be reduced
good lord I put so much thought into Halcandrans. I keep thinking about how their teeth would work and I haven't even BOTHERED to touch the puffball family. how are you an elastic cartilaginous orb mammal with teeth. how do your teeth work. axilars canonically have BIG ol' fangs and probably a few scary-looking multipoint seal teeth but I don't know what of those the regular batamon and waddle dees would have. they'd probably evolve away from the trident teeth once they move back on land though
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They're angry that it's windy. Grumpy little lad.
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"Blanco" - Novato, CA
That's a chibi. Look at him he doesn't even have legs
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Pokemon of the day: #777 Togedemaru
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Was doing laundry at my local shelter and just-
LOOK AT THEM
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WHY IS IT SO ORBULAR?!
(I'm not sure where this is from it just keeps popping up all over the place for me)
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