💚 Yhan, my deep one character ♡
seen from Japan

seen from Malaysia

seen from Germany

seen from Japan
seen from China
seen from Sri Lanka

seen from Malaysia
seen from Germany
seen from Netherlands
seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from Germany
seen from Türkiye
seen from Türkiye
seen from Japan
seen from Japan

seen from Germany

seen from China

seen from Japan

seen from Germany
💚 Yhan, my deep one character ♡
A first attempt at a lovecraftian, Cthulhuesque stoneware clay sculpture! It's quite small (~11cm tall) and the surface is nice to the touch and looks good. The glaze is great and the underpaint probably adds a but of extra green to it!
There are a few imperfections, and now I know what I want to do differently next time I try something like this. But all in all, I like it.
Spec-Dinovember Day 5: Deep One, a marine reptile adapted for deep dives
The Triassic saw the proliferation of many lineages of strange creatures filling novel niches. Amongst these were a host of reptiles dipping their toes into the realm of marine adaptations. While Ichthyosaurs and to a lesser extent Nothosaurs and Placodonts would see wide successes, others like Helveticosaurus would remain minor players. In response to the increasing competition from these larger groups, a lineage of Helveticosaurs would begin adapting to forage in the twilight zone of the midwater, where fish stocks were less hunted. By the Late-Triassic the pinnacle of this trend is Helveticotitan miroungiformis. At an average of 3 and a half tons they dwarf their ancestors by an order of magnitude. Their great bulk insulates them from the frigid temperatures of the deep water, as well as lends them a significant amount of thermal inertia via gigantothermy. The extra mass gives them both greater muscle mass and greater blood volume with which to store oxygen in the extra myoglobin and hemoglobin, allowing prolonged dive times, further enhanced by their reptilian metabolism and it's low oxygen consumption rate. These reptiles lack a whale's echolocation ability, or a shark's electroreception, or even a seal's sensitive whiskers, instead they hunt their prey by sight alone. In the twilight zone there is very little light, but a faint glow does trickle down, and thus prey can be sighted from below by their shadow against this light. As such, Helveticotitan hunt by swimming upside-down and looking for the shadows of fish and cephalopods above. To facilitate this, their skulls are broad across the top and the jaws are narrow, allowing the eyes to see 'downward' in binocular. This unconventional swimming posture has also led to their uncommon color pattern of reverse counter-shading.
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This was initially a prompt I wasn't thrilled about, but as I worked I warmed up to it considerably. It was pretty cool looking into what adaptations extant animals have for deep-diving, especially because like, half of them are just 'get huge' and some biochemistry quirk that works better because you're bigger. Plus, apparently sperm whales will hunt by swimming upside down and just looking for shadows despite having that massive echolocating melon apparently, which I found amusing and gave me an easy solution for how these reptiles find food. I got quite carried away on the sketch, bit of a painting now, and it definitely ate up more time budget than it should have, but it was fun so it's fine!
Over on Bluesky, I debuted some new OCs inspired by Halloween!
Cal and Rebecca.
Cal, a Deep One, is constantly seeking out the Great Old Ones to avenge his human mother's death. Rebecca, a werewolf, is a ranger that wishes to defend her national park. When the Old Ones begin to take root in the Chaney Park, the duo share a common goal...
Killing the Old Ones.
juvenile Deep One || Underwater (2020)
Daggan by Artem Astaroth