You know what I have for you today? The conclusion of Motor City Fur[ry] Con's Saturday as seen in my photos. You know what's coming up next, then? Go on, guess ...

We ran into Pakrat in the arcade room and talked some.

Peering down over the balcony edge. I like that the angle makes Pakrat's walk be up, in frame, while he was walking on a level surface as part of going down.

And here, later in the night, Velveteen comes out to examine the rabbits who hadn't been taken in yet.

Though roped away from them she can still wave to her non-plush relations.

Many of the rabbits have settled down, but you can see some still up to things. A bit above dead center you can see the earless rabbit at a water(?) bowl. At about 9 o'clock you can see that white rabbit still sitting there, acting angy.

Here's Velveteen sitting in the ``Furassic Bark'' jeep prop. I think this might have been the convention theme. Who can say?

And here she examines the mechanical pinball game that still wasn't really plunging right.

In Hospitality was this whack-a-mole-style game and she got some rounds in on that.

Velveteen at the dance. I did my best to take fewer blurry pictures of people in darkness at the dance this year and I think it shows.

Still, I do love when you get nice contrast like this.

Checking back on the rabbits. Here's one settling into a unicorn mouth and not looking happy about it.

And here's Vix hanging out in a quiet lounge to see out the night.
Trivia: Charle Abbot, the Member of Parliament whose bill created the Census of 1801, projected the English population might be anywhere between eight and eleven million people, the higher number, he believed, result of a ``more correct train of reasoning''. The actual tally came in at 8.3 million English people, 2.1 million in Wales and Scotland, and an untallied number in Ireland. Source: The Sum of the People: How the Census Has Shaped Nations, From the Ancient World to the Modern Age, Andrew Whitby.
Currently Reading: The Life of Lines, Tim Ingold.