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"It's knitted or dyed bright pink, and they think it's fun fur.
Subsequently he decorated it with "a hot-glue gun, Day-Glo fun fur, tinsel, black lights and lots of fluorescent paint."
Hairy Mary: Fun Fur, by Craig Conlan (1999)
Some of their most well-known yarns are Homespun, Fun Fur, Vanna's Choice, and Wool-Ease.
Fake fur, also called fun fur or faux fur, is any material made of synthetic fibers designed to resemble fur, normally as part of a piece of clothing.
She constantly plays practical jokes on her patients, wears belly-shirts, decorates her pencils and stethoscopes in pink fun fur, and generally never seems to take her job seriously.
Rykiel also hit upon the trend of big, soft, fun fur done as a huge bubble of color - in her case baby pink, purple knitted fox or teal-blue Mongolian lamb.
"Fun fur" used to be the name given to inexpensive pelts like rabbit and curly lamb, but now the real fun furs are fake furs made of synthetic fibers.
Would he charge enough - enough so that when I see a woman at the supermarket driving a Mercedes convertible and wearing a fun fur, I know without a doubt that it is his wife?
With the development of "fun fur" or "eyelash" yarns in the late 20th Century, an adept craftsperson can knit a boa of one solid color or a mix of various colors.
ALSO AROUND TOWN FUN FUR - A program intended for children ages 5 to 10 lets them learn about and handle animals.
Fun furs, as they were euphemistically called by their marketers, were as dense as a rug, though a mite more glamorous, enveloping the wearer in a sumptuous pile that might have been salvaged from "Wild Kingdom."
The dancers arrived, singly or together, wearing jeans and thick sweaters and high-heeled leather boots, and they hung up their fun furs on the backs of dressing-room doors as the showtape was being wound onto the reel-to-reel in the stage manager's control room somewhere above.
There were women with rollers in their hair, children riding piggyback, distinguished old men in velvet-collared coats, Indian girls with tweed jackets over their filmy saris, teenagers wearing earphones, suburban housewives swaddled in fun furs, and more than the average number of immensely fat women.
Materials included satin, for long evening gowns and flared pants, stretch jersey nylon/polyester for T-Shirts, Fake 'Fun Fur' for jackets and matching hats, and denim for jeans, waiscoats, hats, skirts and even a 'boiler suit' which was very fashionable at the time.