DinApril 2024: The Final Compilation
Hello everyone! I just completed my springtime 30-day dinosaur drawing challenge, DinApril. You can find the prompts here. Enjoy the results!
seen from India

seen from South Africa
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from India

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Norway
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from Japan
seen from Netherlands
seen from China

seen from Germany

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from Uzbekistan

seen from United Kingdom
DinApril 2024: The Final Compilation
Hello everyone! I just completed my springtime 30-day dinosaur drawing challenge, DinApril. You can find the prompts here. Enjoy the results!
The First Flocking of 2024 (#32)
Guanlingsaurus/Tyrannosaurus mcraeensis
Orodromeus/Fruitadens
The next project; Fruitadens Haagarorum
Stegosaurus features in this illustrated diorama of a scene at the Morrison Formation, from the Jurassic in the United States. Design by Stieven Van der Poorten sulc.us/morristego
Fruitadens haagarorum
Fruitadens is an oddity among the Talenta biota, culturally and scientifically. Outside, the smallest of the herbivorous dinosaurs looks quite similar to their neighboring fastieth. Closer examination reveals some surprising features. Unlike the very similar Nanosaurus, Fruitadens has an almost complete covering of short, quill-like plumage. Especially on its proportionally long tail. The skull narrows to the jaws, showing a carnivore-like shape, with its famous heterodont dentition. The large lower canine is visible externally and serves as a reminder of its bite. Fruitadens are generalists, hanging around the wetlands and rivers in the wet season and falling back to the forests during the dry season. Plants and small animals of all kinds are eaten by the critters, and they have displayed remarkable intelligence in working out how to break open mollusc shells to get at the soft innards. Their pelts are predominantly reddish-brown with whites and greys, made up of stiffened quills ending in points. Like cats they can manually raise their pelts to seem larger and prickly. Prickly is a good word for them. Their eyebrow ridges give them a constantly peeved look, which fits with their behavior. Fruitadens act ornery to make up for their small size. They're still much more likely to run than fight, but there are plenty of Talenta hunters who have been bitten for little more than accidental encounters. In their frail bones is a strong bite capable of nipping off fingers. Their attitude, appearance, and habitat of the forests of Talenta have earned them a bad reputation among the halflings, who regard them the same way the average Aundairan would regard a skunk, with a bite instead of a stink. They are not entirely without merit though. Their quills are sought after by the few scholars of the Plains as, in the absence of geese and swans and the normal sort of traveling traders, their quills are the only options for pens, and they make rather sturdy ones at that.
my challege, “HueDinovember” (huevember + dinovember)
day 16-20
Fruitadens - Torvosaurus - Gallimimus - Euoplocephalus - Torosaurus
Dinovember day 6. Fruitadens.