CROCHET - leafy dragon
A cute leafy dragon amigurumi :3 Pattern by KeinMaker on Ribblr
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seen from United States
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CROCHET - leafy dragon
A cute leafy dragon amigurumi :3 Pattern by KeinMaker on Ribblr
Leaf Dragon
Leaf Dragon
Finished some old art!
I will never get tired of making these leafy beasts
A leafy dragon in a shadowbox, probably will be the last art I finish in 2024. It's all watercolor and ink, layered out to hopefully make a 3d effect. I'm quite happy and proud of it.
Designing creatures and dragon is one of my favorite things to do when I’m creating an artwork. I chose a leafy dragon with branch and insect like wings. This particular one comes from my Inktober challenge
LEAF DRAGONS! I've been really looking forward to drawing these little guys <3 They can grow to be huge, with the oldest, Oak, the size of a small forest, but these ones are just little, the thickness of your index finger. Llayan dragons all share their appearance with the trees around them.
I always associate Llayad with golden colours, therefore autumn, but deciduous trees from Australia are thin on the ground (there are two, one of which is subtropical) and I've not found one at all in South Africa. The single temperate deciduous tree I've got is the tanglefoot fagus, represented by the middle dragon here. Llayans therefore refer to autumn as the 'turning of the fagus.' There are three other related faguses (fagi? idk), all of which are evergreen and one of which is actually Kiwi, but screw you I'm bringing them into Llayad and making them deciduous: the myrtle fagus, flat-leafed fagus and the silver fagus.
Red moulmein cedar, represented by the top dragon, is the one that's technically subtropical but I'm stretching it into the Llayan mountains so it can also be temperate. Ditto the white lilac, which is more of a tropical tree that goes gold when it feels like it (so far as I can tell). There's one next to the cafe I often have lunch at and I had no idea it was Australian. Definitely not native to my area but there you go, Llayad can have them.
Finally the, almond of flame, represented by the bottom dragon, is again a straight up tropical tree I'm making temperate, native to south-east Asia so y'know what it counts. That's as native 'deciduous' as I've managed to get.
This is all relevant to the dragons, because the deciduous ones will turn to autumn colours and subsequently lose their leaves in winter, so they can no longer fly until they get new bright green growth in spring. They have seedpods which grow at the tip of their tails, which they'll then drop in the ground and let it grow into a tiny new sapling of a new dragon!
Dragons are very much creatures of magic, nothing to do with fire (though, idk, maybe those which do well with fire and need it to germinate seeds do make fire) but they have some connection with the wind and the weather. I know exactly what that connection is but that's spoilers, so shh. They communicate with twists of wind around the ankles, an uncomfortable breeze up the back of the neck or a soft waft through the hair, up to destructive gales and dark clouds full of lightning.
They may or may not be related to the sea dragons of Tsayth, who can tell?
Leaf noodle 🌿
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Inspired by my favourite leaf noodle that sits at my desk~
lil pseudo dragon cutie for wife Advidya for her dnd character