Meet Diamond the fluffy.
Though her body is incredibly hard, her toughness is low.
She wasn’t born this way—her entire body was coated in a special hardening agent.
The process starts from the surface of her skin, gradually petrifying her body until she can’t move. Only after that do her internal organs begin to shut down.
By the mid-stage, she’s completely paralyzed but still fully conscious.
To keep fluffs in a perfect pose, incomplete ones are restrained with metal frames or braces while still alive.
So even in the early stage, most fluffs can’t move at all.
To preserve the perfect expression, some people insert metal pins, threads, or tiny wire frames into the fluffy’s mouth and eye sockets during the early stage.
As long as they’re removed during the mid-stage, the tiny marks will still heal on their own.
For adult fluffies, the full transformation process takes approximately 1 to 2 weeks. For foals, it typically takes around 5 to 7 days.
I saw the art and thought “Oh, that’s a pretty neat design”, then I read the description and thought “She has no mouth but she must scree”. Then I laughed.
One has to wonder how long the owner will keep her until the novelty of a decorative fluffy wears off. Then she’ll have to spend the remainder of her life as a doorstop. Maybe even as a lawn ornament.
Absolutely atrocious horror beyond belief, what a horribly humiliating death. You can’t move or speak, you are trapped within your own infantile mind. I believe that Fluffies die rather quickly from dehydration and starvation? Or is there a way to “tube feed” them? Oh also - does the hardening agent preserve Fluffy body, or are they going to die and rot away, leaving a glittering husk?
Love it through and through, what a #new-abuse-method
Nutrients are administered through IV drips to maintain their body shape, preventing shrinkage that could cause imperfections.
The puncture from the drip is minimal and doesn’t noticeably damage the fluffy’s appearance.
Internal organs don’t rot, as they too crystallize during the hardening process.
Some people even sell small accessories made from these preserved organs.