Topic: About non relevant uploads for the sake of context

Posted under Art Talk

Greetings

I have a concern about some uploads that require some image context, but those images are non relevant (to be precise, featuring only humans).
For example: in this one #3915767 i had to make a comic to make it relevant since one of the images features just a human girl, but there's a variant i can't post the same way, nor directly for the same issue. For now i rely in the source link

Also i was asked to post another featuring an anthro on a human, but the context includes a render of the girl alone (again, an image featuring only human) and this one hasn't be uploaded in other place to attach a source, nor the format makes it easy to adapt it to a comic like picture.

i heared i can upload only human pics by parent posting and pools when is about context, but i didn't got it really well and don't want to risk a rejection trying it blindy, so if someone can hep with this doubt i'll be grateful.

Thanks in advice.

yes, you can upload human-only art if the comic it's from is otherwise relevant to this site

pools are basically how we organize comics, giving posts that belong to one a nice navigation bar so users can easily skim thru a comic/collection, you can make one for whatever comic you're planing on uploading by visiting this page: https://e621.net/pools/new
you don't need to make it immediately after uploading the art, but it should help put the oddball in context especially for staff

also be sure to tag the not furry art with not_furry

Updated

I guess i get it.
Let say for example i post a non furry pic attached to a parent furry pic that is a sort of continuation. that pic is still valid ¿right?
And i don't thing gonna rely in pools for now then, this time is more about sporadic images than long term projects, but is good to know just in case.

It's quite okay to post non-relevant pictures to e621 when they're part of a pool or a parent-child relationship and they help provide context or help with the telling of a story. An example is a starting picture of a multi-picture transformation sequence showing the character in their original, totally human form. Another is a title or end page that shows no characters but still provides information about the story (even if that's just "The End").

Updated

  • 1