Larger version at: http://chiscringle.deviantart.com/a.....ance-554450037
This is not the lowest door I saw
Thumpie_Bunny_Eve go through.
ID LIST: http://www.furaffinity.net/view/17148704/
FULL PHOTO ALBUM: https://www.dropbox.com/sh/lcv4igyv.....fh43ZiJra?dl=0
DA FOLDER OF GIFs: http://chiscringle.deviantart.com/g.....88/AC2015-GIFs
This is not the lowest door I saw
Thumpie_Bunny_Eve go through.ID LIST: http://www.furaffinity.net/view/17148704/
FULL PHOTO ALBUM: https://www.dropbox.com/sh/lcv4igyv.....fh43ZiJra?dl=0
DA FOLDER OF GIFs: http://chiscringle.deviantart.com/g.....88/AC2015-GIFs
Category Photography / Fursuit
Species Rabbit / Hare
Size 650 x 700px
File Size 9.25 MB
Listed in Folders
Your unsolicited opinion is backed up with a weak argument. However I'll thank you for your opinion anyway and offer up mine: I think the venue for Anthrocon is large enough to accommodate some over-the-top characters. It's also my opinion that no one was overly inconvenienced. Using your logic, we might say that it is inconsiderate for people to bring any fursuit with a tail and limited vision to an indoor con. After all, they slow down the elevator line and require special logistics and accommodations.
Is it not simpler to say "I really don't care for this particular fursuit" and leave it at that?
Is it not simpler to say "I really don't care for this particular fursuit" and leave it at that?
You sure can. However sometimes it's not always the in the best form to say it. But you did, and that's fine.
I was at Anthrocon 2015, and other than the elevator involving a long wait to get to your room floor, I did not find it to be overcrowded. There were no panels that I know of where you couldn't get a seat. The Westin's lobby got crowded but we could move about fine. I saw this fursuiter and didn't have any problems with navigating past them. There are one, maybe two 'pinch points' from the hall from the Westin to the conference center, and this photograph shows one of them. As you can see in this photograph, there are few, if any, people that need to move out of the way of the fursuiter. This photo shows the typical amount of traffic that I ran into when navigating about the conference. Anthrocon 2015 supported 6400 participants, and there are so many places to put people, and so many different events occurring at the same time, that it was managed fine.
I've experienced a lot worse, by the way: The world conference for the Society for Automotive (& aerospace) Engineers (SAE) in Detroit, Michigan will cram close to 40,000 participants into a conference center that is about the same size as the Pittsburgh con. You bump elbows with everyone, everywhere. The same goes for the AGU annual fall meeting in San Francisco: There's 22,000 science posters on display, and at least that many people get crammed into the conference center. We, as conference attendees have learned to adapt and get along. It's a vital skill that I have learned for maximum enjoyment of any conference, be it furry, engineering, or scientific.
I was at Anthrocon 2015, and other than the elevator involving a long wait to get to your room floor, I did not find it to be overcrowded. There were no panels that I know of where you couldn't get a seat. The Westin's lobby got crowded but we could move about fine. I saw this fursuiter and didn't have any problems with navigating past them. There are one, maybe two 'pinch points' from the hall from the Westin to the conference center, and this photograph shows one of them. As you can see in this photograph, there are few, if any, people that need to move out of the way of the fursuiter. This photo shows the typical amount of traffic that I ran into when navigating about the conference. Anthrocon 2015 supported 6400 participants, and there are so many places to put people, and so many different events occurring at the same time, that it was managed fine.
I've experienced a lot worse, by the way: The world conference for the Society for Automotive (& aerospace) Engineers (SAE) in Detroit, Michigan will cram close to 40,000 participants into a conference center that is about the same size as the Pittsburgh con. You bump elbows with everyone, everywhere. The same goes for the AGU annual fall meeting in San Francisco: There's 22,000 science posters on display, and at least that many people get crammed into the conference center. We, as conference attendees have learned to adapt and get along. It's a vital skill that I have learned for maximum enjoyment of any conference, be it furry, engineering, or scientific.
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