Showing posts with label dinosaur. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dinosaur. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 29, 2021

A Veritable Herd of Animated Dinosaurs!

As you may have guessed, I like dinosaurs a lot.  I like animation a lot.  And I love animated dinosaurs.  So the past couple of weeks have been awesome in that respect.  Firstly, the first episode of David James Armsby's "Dinosauria" is out and it is beautiful!

Armsby also posted this incredible making-of video and I don't know what impresses me more: the cancelled "All Days" series, the sculpture, or the "Dinosauria" series scrapbook.

And there's a teaser for the upcoming second episode.  Baby Troodons!  Fuzzy Pachyrhinosaurs!

And on top of all this, Dr. Mark Witton joined the "Fantasy/Animation Podcast" for an episode about "The Land Before Time", where they discuss the strangely intertwined history of dinosaurs and animation and the film's place in the Dinosaur Renaissance.

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Art of the Day!

I can't believe it's already the penultimate day of Sci-Art September.  What a great time!  I shared a lot of mostly paleoart and hopped on the "Dinosauria" fanart train:

9.9.2021 - "Old Buck" Fanart

Wednesday, September 15, 2021

Thoughts - But Also Mostly Sketches - From TetZoom 2021

So TetZoom 2021, which occurred about a week ago and ran all day and into the night, was an absolute blast!  This was the second ever TetZoo Convention I've ever been able to attend and I really really hope they keep the online/livestream portion of the show.  Handy Sketchbook on my knee, I took a lot of notes on the presentations and here they are, though considerably cleaned up: 

The first page of sketches from TetZoom, mostly about Patrofelis
More TetZoom sketches, mostly about dinosaurs, the Beast of Gevauden, and Synapsids.
Yet more TetZoom sketches starring the Dinosauroid, the Land Before Time, Stitch the cat, Ellie the parrot, and the Whale Hand...

One of the highlights of the show was getting to attend the Paleoart Workshop, which I wisely snapped up tickets for as soon as I could.  And so I drew this beautiful Kronosaurus along with our teacher Mark Witton.  What an awesome experience!


9.3.2021 - TetZoom Kronosaur

Wednesday, August 25, 2021

Let's Watch the Teaser for "Dinosauria"

So this looks incredible:

Animator David James Armsby loves dinosaurs and has been hard at work on a series of five short films about life in Cretaceous North America.  And so far they look amazing.  I can't wait to see this in full!

Wednesday, August 4, 2021

Let's Watch "A&E's Dinosaur: The Tale of a Feather"

Get a drink for this one.

Being the final episode on a series-length dinosaur documentary is never a fun time.  Because this is The Extinction Episode -- mostly.

Because as the title "Tale of a Feather" suggests, it's also about the evolution of birds from POSSIBLY MAYBE the smallish theropod dinosaurs.  Remember, it's 1991 and this is still a pretty outrageous theory.  It's also surprisingly frustrating to watch because John Ostrom has been in this series and they never get to naming which specific group of smallish theropods gave rise to birds and ahh, you guys are so close ahh ahh!!!

But never mind that because my.  God.  The.  Ending. 😵😱😰

You're not ready for how this dinosaur documentary ends.  I sure wasn't.  Let's not keep you in suspense any longer.  Here it is:


@babbletrish

The finale of the ‘91 A&E Dinosaur series. It’s… special. ##dinosaur ##documentary ##Weird90s ##wtf ##waltercronkite ##Dinosauroid

♬ original sound - BabbleTrish

 

I reiterate: what?

The longer version isn't going to help at all but here it is anyway:

 

@babbletrish

The full ending of A&E’s Dinosaur, in case you wanted to see the full horror of Dinosaur TV.##dinosaur ##documentary ##Weird90s ##wtf ##Dinosauroid

♬ original sound - BabbleTrish

 

They really ended this with Bioparanoia / the climate and/or nuclear apocalypse is inevitable and Dinosauroids.  Completely devoid of context Dinosauroids yet!  Like we never get the usual, "here's a very weird theory this one guy has and here's the statue they made of it", we just get... this.  Whoever dreamed up this ending has Cortical folds the depth of the Marianas Trench, not least because they ended with "Somehow after humans destroy themselves the dinosaurs will take over" and thought the people watching this would all be okay.  Incredible.

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Help me feed the birds!  I want to be among the last to get eaten when they take over.

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Art of the Day!  Gosh what would an intelligent dinosaur look like?  We just don't know.

3.17.21 - Blue Jay Shenanigans

Wednesday, July 28, 2021

Let's Watch "A&E's Dinosaur: The Tale of an Egg"

"The Tale of an Egg" turns our focus to dinosaur life-cycles and behavior.  Baby-rearing, migrating, fighting, and feeding.  All the things that are fun to speculate and fun to illustrate/animate/puppet.  It's the most kid-heavy episode as well, which makes it a lot of fun.

Somebody start a band based around David Weishampel's Parasaurolophus trumpet already.

Next time: brace yourself, it gets weird.

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(ahem...)

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Art of the Day: some more current loud dinosaurs.

3.15.21 - Spring(?) in Sapsucker Woods

Wednesday, July 21, 2021

Let's Watch "A&E's Dinosaur: The Tale of a Bone"

This week's episode of "Dinosaur" mostly focuses on the Bone Wars.  But what I really love about it are all the interviews with dinosaur artists.  We meet Eleanor Kish and Steve Czerkas and the Dinamation crew.  And -most exiting of all- Ray Harryhausen!  We get a clip of "Gertie the Dinosaur" as well as some of Harryhausen's animation.  John Sibbick and David Norman (they of the famous "Norman-pedia") give interviews and they turn out to be mainly responsible for what the puppet dinosaurs look like here.  I thought they felt familiar.  Also, this happens: 

@babbletrish

Another wonderful moment from the ‘91 A&E Dinosaur series. ##dinosaur ##documentary ##Weird90s ##wtf ##waltercronkite ##NewYorkCity

♬ original sound - BabbleTrish

Next time: Eggs!  Like real eggs, not the one in that one confusing pain reliever commercial.

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(Polite little cough...)

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Art of the Day!  A Kestrel and Barn Owl from a Museum of Science livestream.

3.6.21 - Kestrel and Barn Owl

Wednesday, July 14, 2021

Let's Watch "A&E's Dinosaur: The Tale of a Tooth"

July is going to be a very busy month here at Babbletrish Lodge.  So this feels like the perfect opportunity to watch a documentary series I'd never seen in it's entirety before. It's true, somehow I hadn’t watched the 1991 A&E "Dinosaur" documentary series until just this month and it is a real treasure.  It's another fantastic example of what a dinosaur documentary looked like before "Jurassic Park" and "Walking With Dinosaurs".

Look.  I know I say "They don't make 'em like this anymore" an awful lot, but they REALLY do not make them like this anymore.  We are never going to get a pure gold nugget of a moment like this ever again:


@babbletrish

I haven’t watched the 1991 A&E “Dinosaur!” series until today and so far it is a treasure. ##dinosaur ##documentary ##Weird90s ##moodwhiplash ##SingingKids

♬ original sound - BabbleTrish

Turn the volume up.  You could guess what kind of music scores this scene and you’d be wrong.  I guarantee.  (You also might just hear me chuckle.)

Part One, "Tale of a Tooth", is about the early days of dinosaur paleontology.  There's period costumes, more strange music choices, wonderful puppet dinosaurs, and Dr. Bob Bakker pulls a wooden sword on Walter Cronkite.  And there are vintage commercials, most of which I'd completely forgotten about.  Next week, the Bone Wars!

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So you may have noticed the shiny new donate button on the sidebar but just in case you didn't:

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Art of the Day!  Cornell Birdfeeder sketches

2.19.21 - Cornell Birdfeeder Sketches

Wednesday, July 7, 2021

Digs, Dragons, and the Dinosauroid (again?) Let's Watch "The Great Dinosaur Hunt"

It's almost 100 degrees out!  It's so hot, why don't we take a journey to the desert!

Okay, this one's a real oddity.  I only learned about "The Great Dinosaur Hunt" (a 1993 Goodtimes home video release, not to be confused with the identically titled "Infinite Voyage" and, er, "Postman Pat" episodes) recently on Twitter and since it was a dinosaur documentary I somehow never saw, I needed to watch it.  Three nights later (!) I'm here to tell the tale.

"The Great Dinosaur Hunt" covers the China-Canada Dinosaur Project, an expedition that started in 1986 and carried into 1991.  And it is a fantastic example of what I can only accurately describe as a pre-"Jurassic Park" dinosaur documentary.  First off, it really did take me a while to get through.  For a 90 minute film, this is s-l-o-w.  The focus is on paleontology itself and the truth of the matter is, paleontology is an awful lot of wandering through the desert hoping to find something, anything.  And boy did I feel that vicariously.

Another interesting thing about this documentary is there's almost no animation.  There are a few animated sequences showing living dinosaurs in action, all traditional and by the fine National Film Board crew.  The scene showing the world through a young Troodon's eyes is particularly lovely and I long for a whole short like this.  

Of course as soon as they mentioned Troodon, and because Dale Russel is one of the paleontologists involved, I knew our old friend the Dinosauroid would make an appearance.  I'm honestly starting to wonder if they were required to mention this thing in every dinosaur documentary from this time.  Think of how weird that is; like if every marine biology documentary spent a few minutes on Initial Bipedalism (link goes to an old TetZoo article where sadly the illustrations are gone, but brace yourself for a wild ride anyway.)

And because this mostly takes place in China, the very droning narrator really loves droning on and on about dragons and how the dinosaur scientists are Unearthing the Mysterious Dragon and did you know that the ancient Chinese found dinosaur fossils and thought they were from dragons?  And that in Asia they use the same word for "dinosaur" and "dragon"?  And and and...?  (Turns out this is all, to put it succinctly, Kinda Racist Nonsense TM.  I f-in' knew it. 😒)

Other than that, this is a pretty nifty look at a legendary expedition.  I'm glad to have had my attention brought to it.  Now I need to jump in the lake.

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Art of the Day

So. I knew about the “We’re not sure how Azhdarchids moved on the ground, did they walk on two legs?” theory but I
A. did not know there was a sculpture depicting this or that
B. it looks... Like This.
Anyway, this was all I could see. A vision that haunted me all that night, so I had to draw and share.

5.3.21 - "Life goin' nowhere! / Somebody help me!"

Wednesday, June 30, 2021

Dixon, Dinosauroids, and We're Desperate for a Dub: Let's Watch the "After Man" Specials from Japan!

Boy, I really wish we had subtitles for this one, but I'm glad to get to watch it at all.  Here is the rare 1990 Japanese documentary based upon After Man:

This wasn't too hard for me to follow even though I couldn't understand the narration.  It mostly reiterates the big points in the book, like that no niche in nature stays empty for long and that the ancestors of the animals we know today would've looked very odd to us.  We get to see a lot of Phil Tippet's animation from "Dinosaur!"  Dougal Dixon gets to visit the real lands and animals that inspired his imagined ones, which are brought to life through some wonderfully Harryhausen-esque stop-motion animation.  This is all delightful to watch but I really long for an English-language version, especially so I can better understand the sequence where we encounter our old friend the Dinosauroid as well as Dixon's... different... take on the concept.

Fortunately, we do have English subtitles for the "After Man" music video.  This was part of a program of short educational music videos called "Minna no Uta", kind of the Japanese equivalent of "Schoolhouse Rock".  Understanding the lyrics doesn't answer that many questions, but I really like the designs for the creatures here.

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Art of the Day!

JuneFae isn't over yet!

6.10.21 - It's Puck from "Gargoyles"!

Wednesday, January 13, 2021

The 2020 Paleo Rewind

Before we completely leave 2020 behind, it might be nice to do a year in review type thing.  And while there are a lot of options out there, I don't believe there's one that's more on brand for me than a Paleontology Year in Review.  Since 2020 was a Lot, even in the realm of prehistoric creatures and the people who love them, this Paleo Rewind gives each month to a different YouTuber and the result is a roller coaster.  Here's the whole shebang, edited together by E.D.G.E.: 

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Art of the Day: Another older painting but another one whose joy and energy I want to bring into the New Year.  Corgi owners seem to like this one.  And yes, Fairies riding Corgis is a Folklore Thing.

2.20.18 - The Noble Steed

Wednesday, January 6, 2021

Let's Ring in the New Year with "Along the Moonbeam Trail"

As a fellow admirer of crows once sang in a song that has been drilled in the tooth of my memory since high school, maybe this year will be better than the last.  God I hope so.  I at least intend to blog more, when I can; anything that strikes my fancy and is also too weird and/or wonderful NOT to post about.

Case in point: "Along the Moonbeam Trail".  This is a short silent film recently restored to the best of the editors' abilities (here's hoping they find the ending).  I'd like to thank Tyler Greenfield for posting a clip on Twitter because it's honestly astounding that I've never seen it or heard of it.  It has everything!  It is not my Entire Aesthetic (for one thing, I'd have more than one [1] major female character and she'd do more than being a Deus ex Machina), but it's about as close as a movie from this time period could hope to be:

Everything about this is great but I'm torn between the random witch, the "pterosaur" who's really one of the first movie dragons, and the stegosaurus and his cute skink-tongue.

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Art of the Day!

I painted this back in 2018 and I'm reposting it here to bring this wonderful magical energy into 2021.  Happy New Year!

1.3.18 - Big Mood, 2018

Wednesday, November 25, 2020

Let's Watch "Eyewitness: Dinosaur" on Turkey Day!

Thanksgiving!  I wish you all a wonderful one this year even though, of course, this Thanksgiving is going to be different.  But the important parts of Thanksgiving should survive 2020.   And as we learned about five years ago, Thanksgiving is about family!  And food.  And eating a turkey!  

Turkeys are birds!  Prehistoric-ish birds, even!  Therefore, they are dinosaurs!  So we should celebrate Thanksgiving with dinosaurs!  I have definitely made this joke before!

Everyone of a certain generation remembers the Eyewitness books, which I covered a long time ago.  The documentary series is a little more obscure, but the couple of episodes I've watched are quite nice.  They manage to feel like thumbing through one of the books, and I love the opening credits sequence!  That imaginary museum is basically what my "Mind Palace" feels like.  I really like how they use film clips where the books would use still pictures and art; a Good Book-To-TV Adaptation.  

"Eyewitness: Dinosaur" even goes so far as to animate stop-motion versions of the signature dinosaur models from it's book equivalent.  We also get a cute Aardman-ish mascot character who looks like an ancestor of Henry from "Amazing Animals", which was kind of a spinoff series.  And we get a little bit of Phil Tippett's "Prehistoric Beast" to boot!

We also get the strangest variation of the 90's "little theropods are in one clade, big theropods are in a different one" Great Theropod Classification Mess-Up I've ever seen, and it's right there in the preview of the video.  So basically, for a long time, little theropods like Compsognathus and Coelophysis and the smaller Maniraptors were all thought to be related and placed in the Coelurosaur clade.  Meanwhile Allosaurus, Dilophosaurus, Spinosaurus and good old T. rex, since they were all large, were "Carnosaurs".  In hindsight, this is obviously wrong as hell and kind of like saying "Foxes, housecats, otters, and terriers are all in one family group; wolves, lions, wolverines, and Great Danes are in another, different family group."

Well according to "Eyewitness: Dinosaur", little theropods/Coelurosaurs are in the same family group as birds and large theropods/Carnosaurs are in the same group as... crocodiles.  Which is like saying, "Foxes, housecats, otters, and terriers are all in one family group which also includes pinnipeds (I guess?  Look, we have a distinct lack of an entire clade of diverse flying carnivores, so stay with me.)  Meanwhile, wolves, lions, wolverines, and Great Danes are in another, different family group which also includes... Dimetrodon." That is, at least, a new one.

Have a lovely Thanksgiving, everyone!  I am, as always, truly thankful for all of you. 💖

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Art of the Day!  A nice little landscape for your holiday weekend.

8.23.20 The View from Mt. Batty

Wednesday, October 7, 2020

Let's Read _The Ultimate Dinosaur_!

So, how was your weekend?  No, don't answer that!  How about a kind of Vintage Paleoart post?  I haven't done that in ages.

Over the summer, I read The Ultimate Dinosaur and talked about it on Twitter.

Ultimate Dinosaur cover

Published in 1992 by Bantam Books, edited by Byron Priess and Robert Silverberg, and featuring art and writing by an astonishing variety of people, Ultimate Dinosaur is a pretty wild ride.  It's right smack in the middle of the Dinosaur Renaissance and mere months ahead of the release of "Jurassic Park".  It's also remarkably "All-Yesterdays"-y in some parts.  Right away, it has a veritable roller coaster of an opening, with lovely decorations by William Stout:


You got a problem with Muppets, Dodson?

The book is divided into several chapters, each of which contains lots of paleoart, a factual (for 1992) essay about life in the Mesozoic, and a science fiction story.  The latter makes this one of the more unique dinosaur books of all.  Most of the stories involve dinosaurs or are at least... dinosaur-adjacent, like Dave Wolverton's "Siren Song at Midnight", illustrated below by William Parsons.  

It was Mer-May, when I read the book so of course this art caught my attention.  There are indeed Mermaids in the short story, as well as Euparkeria, which covers the prehistoric animal requirement.  The actual story is about the coming climate apocalypse and wars over the few remaining natural resources.  Fun!  And yet not the biggest bummer of a story in the whole book!

I mentioned that there are some moments in the book that I can only describe as "All Yesterdays"-y.  They mostly occur in the scifi stories, which almost lend themselves to "Hey, what if dinosaurs were a lot stranger than we ever suspected" speculation.  The weirdest such speculation, mentioned in two stories even, is one I would have never expected: Lactating Dinosaurs.

The above excerpt comes from Gregory Benford's "Shakers of the Earth", a story about our old friend Seismosaurus, then just recently described.  And in it, the big diplodocus can suckle her babies.  Which she also cares for at all.  (Side-rant: Anyone who grew up with "Jurassic Park" and still has a problem with feathered maniraptors can A. get off my lawn/blog, like what are you even doing here anyway, and B. ask themselves how us "Baby" and "Land Before Time" era 80's kids are coping with modern discoveries of sauropod reproductive strategies.)

And this excerpt comes to us from Barry Malzberg's bizarre "Major League Triceratops", where the titular dinosaur ends up being weirder than expected by specifically NOT lactating.  I don't think I've ever come across this theory before or since.

Anyway, it is still 1992, and so according to this excerpt from one of the nonfiction essays by Don Lessem, Therizinosaurs and Deinocheirus were almost certainly brutal killing machines:

And since it’s 1992, the question of bird ancestry is... exactly that.  Still even a question, I mean, like in this essay by Ralph Molnar.  Megalancosaurus, if you're wondering, has a beaky face and those pesky collarbones - and otherwise looks very like a weird(er) Chameleon.  But what really slays me is the "sometimes inane" comment:

Look at these 90’s raptors from Doug Henderson from the adjacent page!


They come ahead of one of the strangest stories in the entire book, Ray Bradbury's "Besides a Dinosaur, Whatta Ya Wanna Be When You Grow Up?".  It starts out very Dandelion Wine-esque and super nostalgic and cute:


Aww.  Ben will then go on to sharpen his teeth, eat extremely rare meat, scare the dog and the cat out of their minds, and mutter in his fevered sleep about primeval Antediluvian demon-reptiles waddling, rampaging, and nightmare-kiting in the deep.  His Grandpa intervenes by bringing the boy to a much more wholesome obsession like, I dunno, trains. Yeah, trains!

This story is copyright 1983, not 1953.

Which brings us to Harry Harrison's "Dawn of the Endless Night", here illustrated by the always awesome Wayne Barlowe.  It's haunting, and the biggest bummer in the whole book and no I am not forgetting the nonfiction chapters about the actual K-P Extinction.



So... speaking of things that were actually published in the early 80's but feel like they are from decades earlier, welcome to my West of Eden rant.  This short story is kind of, if you turn your head and squint, a prequel to the series, explaining why some small parts of the fantasy world are ruled by mammals and humans while dinosaurs and intelligent lizard-people rule everywhere else.  Teenage me had a very strong need to find the novels.  Seriously, intelligent lizard-people!  With a female-dominant culture!  And because they’re semi-aquatic they use sign language, which doesn't rely on sound, and biotechnology, which is a tech breakthrough that doesn't involve setting things on fire or putting wheels on them!  Goodness, there was real thought put into this!  Holy moly there’s an ENCYCLOPEDIA in the back!  A big thick fantasy novel with such insanely detailed world building that there's an encyclopedia in the back!  This is going to rule!

Now, over the years, I've since noticed that most reviews of West of Eden focus on the world-building and not, say, the fantasy racism.  Or fantasy sexism.  Or actual real-life racism and sexism.  It is, as the kids say, pretty cringey for it's time.  Anyway, how about a strange illustration by frequent Dougal Dixon collaborator Philip Hood!  I don't think context will help.

As I said, The Ultimate Dinosaur is so very unusual that I can definitely recommend grabbing a copy if you can.  It also makes me long for more books combining fact, fiction, and art.

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Art of the Day!

Fanart of the Universal Osprey!

8.26.20 Universal Osprey

Wednesday, January 8, 2020

The Triumphant Return of Walter Fozbek!

Few things make me happier than getting to finally tie up a long-dangling loose end. 

You may recall that way WAY back in the summer of 2011, I wrote two long, weird posts about The Double Disappearance of Walter Fozbek by Steve Senn, a short, weird book that I mostly remembered for it's very short, very weird animated adaptation that aired as part of the anthology series "CBS Storybreak".  I strongly recommend reading those posts because there's a lot of information in them.  Like I said, this is a very weird book.  (You'll also get to enjoy some early-installment weirdness.  Who the hell is this person who actually enjoyed the taste of an IPA?  Certainly not I?)

As happy as I was to finally find the book, I still longed to watch the cartoon again.  I figured by now that it was lost to the ages, Lost Media if you will.  But it turns out that there's a small but dedicated contingent of YouTubers finding and uploading as many "CBS Storybreak" episodes as they can find.

And, miraculously, "The Double Disappearance of Walter Fozbek" is among them!  What a great way to kick off the new decade!  Here it is:



Goodness.

I remember practically every minute of this strange little cartoon. It's really close to the book, aside from a somewhat streamlined ending, "Flintstones"-ish prehistoric gags and all.  There's also a touch more existential angst.  Like, certainly "The Last Unicorn" this ain't.  But that scene where Walter (remember he's the only human in a world of anthropomorphic animals) is face-to-face with the fossil remains of another human (remember humans are extinct in this world); that kind of thing messes you up as a kid. 

Between the New Kids on the Block Christmas Special and "Walter Fozbek", this has been a very good time for “Yay I KNEW it was real!  And, now that I can finally watch it after 20-30 years, I completely understand why everyone looked so confused and slightly concerned when I tried to describe it to them.”

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Art! A cute pudgy Unicorn and her tiny Fairy friends to bless our 2020's.

4.19.19 - Pudgy Unicorn

Wednesday, September 12, 2018

Bill Maylone's "64,000,000 Years Ago"

I love a good stop motion dinosaur as much as the next person but goodness look at this lovely short!



"64,000,000 Years Ago" is a wonderful showcase of dinosaurs from 1981.  It's therefore right smack in that weird era when pop culture was just starting to catch up with the then-still-kind-of-new "wait, maybe dinosaurs weren't big dumb failures" theories.  And I love every minute of it, but especially the bullying, cock-blocking(!) Tyrannosaurus.

The animation is by Bill Maylone and it looks incredibly familiar, like I'd seen this footage used in another dinosaur video.  The only other Maylone animated shorts I can find (and they are both delightful) are a surprisingly stressful woolly mammoth short and "Catapult Through Canada".  If anyone remembers an educational short where a Gastornis pounces on a Hyracotherium, let me know.

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Art of the Day!

7.26.18 - Stormy Sky

I can't believe it's September already...

Wednesday, April 4, 2018

2018 Animal Kingdom Sketches

I went to Animal Kingdom for the first time since they opened Pandora: The World of Avatar Pandora Landora!  But before we talk about that, we need to dive deep into the early days of this blog and talk Moleskines and Moleskine alternatives.

2018 Moleskine-Alikes

The unthinkable happened; I was about to go on a trip and did not have a new Sketchbook handy to start once my current one ran out of pages.  (I draw through and entire Sketchbook and start a new one immediately.  I have heard this is unusual of me but my broken OCD brain and I just can't believe it.)  Fortunately, I was able to order the two lovelies pictured above right away from Amazon.

The one on top is the one I am currently using and that went to Florida with me, the ZenArt Supplies B6 Sketchbook.  And it's very nice for sketching, doodling, and writing with a pencil or ballpoint pen.  But the pages are almost ridiculously thin; I have to scan with a sheet of card stock in between the pages or you'd have a nice preview of the art on the next page.  Art markers bleed right through and the pages roll over and give up at the very sight of even a dry-ish watercolor brush.  It fits right in my purse, though, and so this little Sketchbook joined me on every ride, show, exhibit, and other adventure in Disney World.  (For what it's worth, yes the paper is blacklight sensitive.)

And the ZenArt went to Animal Kingdom with me.  I have to say the ZenArt is very nice for drawing quickly on the spot.  I suppose though, so would a Sketchbook with nicer paper of the same size.  Oh well, here are the studies of the animals there:

3.7.18 - Disney's Animal Kingdom Sketches

3.7.18 - Disney's Animal Kingdom Sketches

3.7.18 - Disney's Animal Kingdom Sketches

3.7.18 - Disney's Animal Kingdom Sketches

3.7.18 - Disney's Animal Kingdom Sketches

3.7.18 - Disney's Animal Kingdom Sketches

3.7.18 - Disney's Animal Kingdom Sketches

Wednesday, April 5, 2017

WDW Trip Report: Animal Kingdom Sketches

Oh yes, it is time!   Time to share what me and my little Moleskine Watercolor Sketchbook got up to while in Disney's Animal Kingdom:

2.21.17 - Animal Kingdom Studies

Wild Anhinga spotted on the river, a duck (Pochard?), and a really cool plant.

2.21.17 - Animal Kingdom Studies

More abstract studies of another Anhinga.

2.21.17 - Animal Kingdom Studies

On the subject of birds, there is a new presentation at Dinoland USA that features live birds, is essentially a sequel to my beloved Flights of Wonder, and matter-of-factly presents birds as a kind of dinosaur.  This... okay, Dinoland still makes me drink heavily, but this is a very nice change for the better.  More like this, please.

2.21.17 - Animal Kingdom Studies

2.21.17 - Animal Kingdom Studies

Flights of Wonder is still awesome and I finally got to sit in the "I'm glad I am wearing a hat" seats.  Only thing is, I thought I'd heard that the show had finally received a rewrite, but it seems essentially the same.  I tell you, the Dr. Guano story is getting as taxing as Little Red back in the day.

2.21.17 - Animal Kingdom Studies

The Komodo Dragon was surprisingly spry, and the Lion Macaques are a new addition.

2.21.17 - Animal Kingdom Studies

A graceful Tree Monitor, a handsome Jungle Fowl, and a Mystery Bovine!  (All Ears identifies it as a Banteng, while the Cast Member I asked called it a Water Buffalo.  Either way, nice model.)

2.21.17 - Animal Kingdom Studies

An Argus Pheasant and Crowned Pigeon...

2.21.17 - Animal Kingdom Studies

...and some studies from my Safari photos.

2.21.17 - Animal Kingdom Studies

Bonus: A Limpkin I met at the Boardwalk docks...

2.20.17 - EPCOT Manatee Studies

And a surprisingly graceful Manatee at the Living Seas.