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It's an aquatic dragon.

I still have to pen it, and maybe colour it (coloured pencils, I still haven't gotten around to practicing with watercolours), and trim it for framing (followed by framing). Then it'll be ready for sale.

 

Both drawings are for my Junior Achievement company.

BAA<--cringe name is cringe

 

Also I cans draw gud except for fish.

RIP in fish.

 

This one probably took me an hour to an hour 45 minutes.

Collins 1939; Alice's Adventure in Wonderland and through the looking-glass by Lewis Carroll with 8 colored plates by A.H. Watson.

Drawing for a friends zine.

Drawing with some watercolour and small amount of tempera.

Talens Ecoline Watercolour Ink. Available here www.singulart.com/en/artist/tony-belobrajdic-10927

last minute portfolio makin' :) thats why the quality is soo poor, its made of cardboard with a knife and sticker paper :)

nude watercolors at Revolver's Mondays with a gorgeous model

pencil drawing with water colour

 

left: Opel Olympia Rekord CarAVan

right: Opel Commodore B GS/E automatic

ONE continuous loop goes through both legs and the centre of it goes up to the S-hook. A second continuous loop goes through both arms.

 

The whole process is now in one blog post here: wovenflame.blogspot.ca/2013/04/nappy-choo-restringing-tut...

lápiz, plumones y tinta

Black and white chalk on Strathmore toned tan paper.

22.9 x 30.5 cm.

September 2019.

pencil on paper, 2008

You can see what I was going for in the new version. Actually, like Daniel mentioned, the legs could still be longer!

20231019 - Plump - Ink Drawing

Some of my "students" don't like black scarves and emblem pins. Hahaha! The inspiration for this drawing came from the manga, Muhyo and Roji. I've been reading it lately and got really hooked.

 

This drawing is dedicated to my friend, Kyomi.

 

Applied drawing

by Brown, Harold Haven, 1869-1932

 

Published 1916

Topics Drawing, Decoration and ornament

instagram: @a.creature

tumblr: art-creature

shops: artcreature.storenvy.com

society6.com/artcreature

This was during a conference call. My mind wandering. All these people are stuck in my head and it's up to my hand and pen to get them out.

Drawings of girls who do not yet exist. Just for fun ;)

Blythes are always so fun to draw! I should do it more.

Learn fashion design drawing and sketching the easy way.

Fashion Design Drawing

HANNA BARBERA STUDIOS

LAUREL and HARDY

Original Animation TELEVISION SERIES 1967

 

Type: AWESOME Original Production Animation MODEL Drawing of HARDY and PIRATE from the 1967 HANNA BARBERA Animated TELEVISION SERIES

 

This is one of the original Production MODEL (Pencil Drawings) that was used to DESIGN THE ART that appeared under the camera during

the production filming of the original Television Commercial.

 

NOTE: THIS IS AN ORIGINAL; NOT A MASS PRODUCED LIMITED EDITION

 

Size: 12 field 12.5 x 10.5

Type: . Vintage Hand Drawn Art

Condition: EXCELLENT

Featuring LAUREL and HARDY

Date 1967

  

NOTES:

 

Laurel and Hardy the animated series was an updated version of Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy's comedic acts by the animation studio Hanna-Barbera

 

Larry Harmon - Stan Laurel, Stanvard

Jim MacGeorge - Oliver Hardy, Oliverd

Hal Smith - Crook

Don Messick - Hurricane Hood

 

Episodes

Can't Keep a Secret Agent

How Green Was My Lawn Mower

Mutt Rut

Missile Hassle

No Moose is a Good Mose

Prairie Panicked

False Alarms

High Fly Guys

The Bullnick

Ball Maul

Handle with Care

Hillbilly Bully

Babe's in Sea Land

Sitting Roomers

You and Your Big Mouse

Hot Rod Hardy

Rocket Wreckers

Rome Roamers

Crash and Carry

Defective Story

Knight Mare

Desert Story

Fancy Trance

Tale of a Sale

Auto Matic Panic

Shiver Mr. Timbers

Suspect in Custody

Big Bear Bungle

Shrinking Sheik

Stand Out Stand In

Bond Bombed

Mounty Rout

What Fur

Camera Bugged

Plumber Pudding

Spook Loot

Cooper Bopper

Robust Robot

Vet Fleet

Feud for Thought

Love Me Love My Puppy

Wacky Quackers

Country Buzzin

Naps an Saps

Truant Ruined

Always Leave 'em Gigglin'

Bad Day in Baghdad

The Missing Fink

Badge Budgers

Good Hoods

Puppet Show Down

Two for the Crow

Animal Shelter

Ring a Ding King

Tragic Magic

Beanstalk Boobs

Leaping Leprechaun

Up and Downs

Mars Little Helper

The Genie was Meanie

Tourist Trouble

Curfew for Kids

Lion Around

Shoot Down at Sundown

Ali Boo Boo

Horse Detectives

The Two Musketeers

Ghost Town Clowns

Hurricane Hood

Ride and Seek

Shoe Shoe Baby

Tee Pee TV

Train Strain

Frog Frolic

Shutter Bugged

Southern Hospitality

Circus Run Aways

Pie in the Sky

Witch Switch

Sign of the Times

Slipper Slip Up

Two Many Cooks

Dingbats

Flea's a Crowd

We Clothe at Five

Quick Change

The Stone Age Kid

Whing Ding

Mistaken Identi-Tree

Termite Might

To Bee or Not to Bee

Laff Staff

Pet Shop Polly

Rodeo Doug

Riverboat Detectives

Try and Get It

Unhealthy Wealthy

Honesty Always Pays

Plant Rant

Sky High Noon

Get Tough

Handy Dandy Diary

Jumpin Judo

Gold Storage

Lots of Bad Luck

They Take the Cake

Kangaroo Kaper

Strictly for the Birds

The Finks Robbery

Bird Brains

Birds of a Feather

Switcheroony

Bowling Boobs

Horsey Sense

Mechanical Mess-up

Dog Tired

Goofer Upper Golfers

Wayout Campers

Hard Days Work

My Friend the Inventor

Sky Scraper Scape

Fair Play

Fly Foot Flatfeet

Sleepy King

A Real Live Wife

A Real Tycoon

Baboon Tycoon

Stuporman

Wheel and Deal Seal

Wishy Washy Fish Tale

Lumber Jerks

That's Show Biz

Wolf in Sheeps Clothing

A Clothes Call

Boot Hill Bill

Stop Action Faction

Molecule Rule

Mummy Dummy

Peek a Boo Pachyderm

Fly Spy

Franken Stan

Nitey Knight

Flight of the Bumble Brains

Salt Water Daffy

Secret Agents OOO

Flipped Van Winkles

From Wrecks to Riches

Traunt or Consequences

Sassy Sea Serpent

Hanna-Barbera Cartoons, Inc. (pronounced /ˌhænə bɑrˈbɛrə/) (formerly Hanna-Barbera Productions, Inc., and originally H-B Enterprises, Inc.) was an American animation studio that dominated North American television animation during the second half of the 20th century. The company was originally formed in 1957 by former Metro Goldwyn Mayer animation directors William Hanna and Joseph Barbera in partnership with Columbia Pictures' Screen Gems television division, as H-B Enterprises, Inc..[1]

 

Established after MGM shut down its animation studio in 1957, H-B Enterprises, Inc. was renamed Hanna-Barbera Productions, Inc. in 1959. Over the next three decades, the studio produced many successful cartoon shows including The Flintstones, Scooby-Doo, Where Are You?, Jonny Quest, The Yogi Bear Show, The Jetsons, The Huckleberry Hound Show, Top Cat, Wacky Races, The Quick Draw McGraw Show, Space Ghost, The Smurfs and The Magilla Gorilla Show.

 

Laurel and Hardy were one of the most popular comedy teams of the early to mid Classical Hollywood era of American cinema. Composed of thin, English-born Stan Laurel (1890–1965) and heavy, American-born Oliver Hardy (1892–1957) they became well known during the late 1920s to the mid-1940s for their work in motion pictures; the team also appeared on stage throughout America and Europe.

 

The two comedians first worked together on the silent film The Lucky Dog. After a period appearing separately in several short films for the Hal Roach studio during the 1920s, they began appearing in movie shorts together in 1926.[1] Laurel and Hardy officially became a team the following year, and soon became Hal Roach's most lucrative stars. Among their most popular and successful films were the features Sons of the Desert (1933), Way Out West (1937), and Block-Heads (1938)[2] and the shorts Big Business (1929), Liberty (1929), and their Academy Award-winning short, The Music Box (1932).[3]

 

The pair left the Roach studio in 1940, then appeared in eight "B" comedies for 20th Century Fox and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer from 1941 to 1944.[4] Disappointed in the films in which they had little creative control, from 1945 to 1950 the team did not appear on film and concentrated on their stage show, embarking on a musical hall tour of England, Ireland and Scotland.[4] They made Atoll K, a French/Italian production and their last film, in 1950/1951, before retiring from the screen. In total they appeared together in 106 films. They starred in 40 short sound films, 32 short silent films and 23 full length feature films, and in the remaining 11 films made guest or cameo appearances

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