Request from DOTB18: a Jurassic Park “Velociraptor” and a Deinonychus giving each other the stink eye.
I’m terrible at drawing pronated “raptor” hands, apparently. In other news, I think I finally got down how wings work when they’re folded.
Request from DOTB18: a Jurassic Park “Velociraptor” and a Deinonychus giving each other the stink eye.
I’m terrible at drawing pronated “raptor” hands, apparently. In other news, I think I finally got down how wings work when they’re folded.
Just came to me. Dunno why.
From left to right: Tsaagan as Solidus Snake, Linheraptor as Liquid Snake, Velociraptor as Solid Snake, and Deinonychus as Naked Snake/Big Boss.
A guide on how to make a “raptor”.
The poor sod of a skeletal I massacred is none other than Scott Hartman’s Velociraptor. My apologies, Scott.
IF YOU’RE GOING TO PUT FEATHERS ON YOUR RAPTOR, GO THE WHOLE MILE, DON’T JUST STICK SOME ON THE BACK OF THE HEAD AND THE TIP OF THE TAIL AND CALL IT A DAY
FOR FUCKS SAKE
Quick little colored doodle of a Velociraptor with Northern Bald Ibis/Hermit Ibis/Waldrapp coloration and feather arrangement. I know the two don’t really have similar lifestyle and such, and that giving feathered dinosaurs extant bird colorations/arrangements isn’t too accurate, but hey, it’s pretty fun. As long as it makes sense, of course, and you’re not making a 20-foot long dinosaur look like an owl.
Deinonychus resting, then getting up and going after something, I dunno.
I decided to make an accurate version of that one comic. Since I wanted them to be contemporary species, I turned Littlefoot and the Carnegie Collection Velociraptor into a young Brontomerus and a Utahraptor.
Protoceratops playing on the computer, while the Velociraptor behind him laments over his inability to play computer since he can’t pronate his hands. Such a tragedy.
I don’t know, I’ve heard ceratopsians weren’t great at pronating either. And the Velociraptor could always just stick its elbows out to make its hands face down.
Although I now realize that I’ve always wanted to say “that Protoceratops is a spy!” and just never had a proper excuse. Golly gee whillikers.
I just assumed that since ceratopsians could use their forelimbs to walk on, that they could pronate. As for the elbow thing…
Coelurosaurs have pretty inflexible fingers too, so that probably doesn’t help either.
What is perspective and anatomy
Source: perpetualartistsblock
Protoceratops playing on the computer, while the Velociraptor behind him laments over his inability to play computer since he can’t pronate his hands. Such a tragedy.
Neat pictures, although they aren’t raptors, even though they’re tagged as such. Top one’s an ornithomimosaur, while the bottom one’s a tyrannosaur.
A Velociraptor. No reference used.
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