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So this the main character of my comic Katzbalger, Stefan Wulf.
He's actually a jackal like animal, his design kind of just does its own thing and most importantly he doesn't look like a wolf.  
The family is named Wulf, maybe at some point they were wolves but now they are just the growing middle/merchant class.

Stefan's family are wine merchants that only recently became protestant mostly due to wine taxation that crippled their families income a generation before him.  His father is very sentimental about the vineyards always lamenting the effects of taxation but Stefan really could care less, he's actually quite cynical towards the nostalgia his father has. He would rather prefer the properties they own would make stable income as wine in this century does not.

His views, while often extreme and somewhat hypocritical, are not uncommon for the time period he comes out of.  The story shows him in various points of his life and how many opinions he has as they change or become strength by what he faces.


I'm also uploading his nude turn around, I'll always make nudity an attachment so you can choose to look at it. I design characters naked with complex colourations and in some scenes are seen naked or half clothed.
I switched up his colouration because he looked way to similar to my fiancé's fursona as he was more golden in colour before. I chose a darker phase, which fits him better. 

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Comments

Colin Leighton

I really like the wine merchant angle with his story - wine-related occupations aren't that commonly delved into in historical fiction, at least not that I've read, so it offers chance for readers to learn a little wine history via the story.

redcoatcat

Thanks, it's funny since history of wine making and it's taxation of is so very well documented. (party a reason I gravitated towards that hah-ha) You're correct it's something you don't see much in historical fiction. Maybe a passing comment on owning a vineyard but rarely a focus.

Colin Leighton

Besides which literary references to wine generally focus more on Italy and France, which is a shame given Germany makes (IMO) some of the -best- wines in Europe. At any rate, makes me look forward all the more to seeing more of this story =)