View allAll Photos Tagged cryptid
Bigfoot, Fresno Nightcrawler, chupacabra, Mothman, Nessie, sewer gator, R.O.U.S., grootslang, tanzelwurm, giant millipede, Jersey devil, bat creature, ghost, goat-spider, [unidentified], slime/blob (Blobara).
Cryptozoology figures from the Unidentified Mystery Animal, Collect Club, and Great Mystery Museum Collections
Jenny Haniver, is the curious term for a man-made cryptid that was sold to sailors and tourists alike since the 16th Century. Constructed from dried rays, cuttlefish and other oddities of the deep the Jenny Haniver was often mistaken for a mythical creature in the flesh, and some even believed it had medicinal properties.
All pictures taken at "Sovereigns of Elyona - Medieval Fantasy RP" @ maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Forest%20Song/24/217/2999
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Series created on ClipDrop SDXL 1.0 - I use the site to test my prompts
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Who said you can't eat it?
This combination of ox and spider is mind-bogglingly huge!
Featured on Life In Plastic: nerditis.com/2015/06/10/life-in-plastic-mini-toy-review-d...
At the old Balete tree.
The kapre is a Philippine cryptid creature with the appearance of an phenomenally tall, long-legged, god type of hairy humanoid, that sits in big trees and smokes cigarettes. It is often seen waiting for people as they walk through a path. It scares away little children who play at night. If you're stuck in a place and you keep going around in circles, you're said to be played around by a kapre. To escape its control, you must remove your shirt/clothing, and wear it inside-out.
The term kapre comes from the Arabic word "kaffir", meaning a non-believer in Islam. The early Arabs and the Moors used it to refer to the non-Muslim Indians who were dark-skinned. The term "kaffir" was also used for Papuan slaves brought to the Philippines by the Portuguese before slavery was abolished by Spain.
Here's a rendition by Piya.
Handmade 100% wool zombie frog with needle-felted mouth, eye sockets, eyeballs, ribs, bone, brains, and blood. Head, right arm, and left leg attached to body using magnets--detach for endless posing possibilities!
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Moments later after a few blurry photos, the party was ruined when Bigfoot ran away and hid.
Figures used: USA Cryptids (Archie McPhee)
#drawlloween2025, #drawlloween
So this is part of a collection of roughly 100 images of interesting monsters/supernatural things made using dall-e 3. Trying to create my own original creatures/test myself. This should link to a album full of this sorta stuff. subscribe and message if you dig it.
An ancient cryptid thought to roam the Brazilian Amazon. Some say it resembles a giant sloth, while others say it is more akin to bigfoot. It is said to have only one eye and a mouth in its belly, which it has supposedly used to rip out the tongues of cows.
My version stands about 3 feet tall, has jointed limbs, and wired arms/hands. He is made from faux fur and 100% wool. His hands and feet are the same size as my own!
Made for the Plush Team July/August challenge.
For more info on mapinguari: channel.nationalgeographic.com/series/beast-hunter/5107/f...
A monumental robotic light sculpture, CRYPTID exists as a vibrant anomaly in contrast to contemporary automata, sharing a presence both radiant and reserved.
Credit: Jürgen Grünwald
All pictures taken at "Sovereigns of Elyona - Medieval Fantasy RP" @ maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Forest%20Song/24/217/2999
created with Dreamwombo AI
the prompt for a series remained the same (part of it):
perfect closeup ultra detailed smiling Baroque compound vampire ghost slaanesh made out of luminous dust at foggy night, cryptid taxidermy, Bogomil's Universe, made of liquid dust,sparkling reflections,by Susan Seddon Boulet, h.r. giger vlaho bukovac, leonardo da vinci, Donald Southam Lawrence, Rolf Armstrong, Simon Bisley
The Loch Ness Monster (Scottish Gaelic: Niseag) is a cryptid that is reputed to inhabit " in the Scottish Highlands. It is similar to other supposed lake monsters in Scotland and elsewhere, though its description varies from one account to the next. Popular interest and belief in the animal has varied since it was brought to the world's attention in 1933
Spot-bellied Eagle Owl
The spot-bellied eagle-owl (Bubo nipalensis), also known as the forest eagle-owl is a large bird of prey with a formidable appearance. It is a forest-inhabiting species found in the Indian Subcontinent and Southeast Asia. This species is considered part of a superspecies with the barred eagle-owl (Bubo sumatranus), which looks quite similar but is allopatric in distribution, replacing the larger spot-bellied species in the southern end of the Malay Peninsula and the larger island in Southeast Asia extending down to Borneo.
The spot-bellied eagle-owl is a large species of owl. It measures from 50 to 65 cm (20 to 26 in) in length. It is the sixth longest owl in the world on average and has the ninth longest wings of any living owl. The ear-tufts of the spot-bellied are very long and conspicuously of variable length, giving them a somewhat scraggly appearance at the tips. The ear-tufts of the spot-bellied eagle-owl measure up to 63 to 76 mm (2.5 to 3.0 in) in length. Most eagle-owls are well-feathered on both their leg and toes, while the barred eagle-owl is featherless on the toes and feathered on the legs, and the spot-bellied eagle-owl has feathered legs and feet, but the terminal digits of the toes are bare before the talons. The feet and talons as formidable as any eagle-owl, being very large, heavy and powerful for their size.
The spot-bellied eagle-owl is overall a stark, grayish brown bird, with dark, coarse brown coloration over the back and upper wings. The throat and underparts are mainly pale fulvous in color with black and white horizontal stripes along the flanks of the body that become broad spots on the abdomen and under tail coverts. On the wings, the primaries are dark brown with lighter brown stripes and the secondaries are more heavily barred with buff-brown coloration. The lores are covered in bristly feathers and the cheeks are brownish-white with black feather shafts. The large ear tufts slant off to the sides.
This owl is noted for its strange, human-sounding call, and it has been suggested that it is the same as the cryptid known as ulama or "Devil Bird" in Sri Lanka. A local name is Maha Bakamuna ("large horned owl"). According to www.cryptozoology.com, in July 2001 it was confirmed that ulama description perfectly matches spot-bellied eagle-owl. This call consists of a scream, which rises and then falls in tone. The territorial call of the species, like that of most other eagle-owls, consists of low hoots with two-second intervals between hoos. The voice is booming, deep and carries quite far. It is usual for forest-dwelling owls (and many different kinds of birds) to have an extensive and complex range of vocalizations since vision is more limited than in open or semi-open habitats. However, the spot-bellied eagle owl has relatively small ear openings even for a member of the genus Bubo, suggesting that some territorial behaviour is carried out visually instead of auditorily.
This species is distributed the Lower Himalayas from Kumaon east to Burma, thence to central Laos and central Vietnam. They are found throughout the Indian subcontinent and peninsular Southeast Asia down into the southernmost limits of the range in Sri Lanka and to 12 degrees north in southern Thailand. The spot-bellied eagle-owl dwells mainly in primary or older second growth forests. Potentially, they can come to inhabit nearly all varieties of land-based habitats but prefer those such as dense, evergreen forests or moist deciduous forests within its range, though can range secondarily into tropical valleys, terrai and shola in the lower hills of India. Although often considered uncommon to somewhat rare, recent photographic evidence indicates that they are particularly widely found in different parts of India and may simply avoid detection, so long as appropriate wooded habitat remains.
The spot-bellied eagle-owl is nocturnal and often spends its day hidden in the dense foliage of large forest trees. However, they have been observed on the move and even hunting during the day, especially in forests with minimal human disturbance. Their activity normally picks up at dusk as they begin to hunt. This species is generally uncommon, likely needing large hunting and breeding territories and thus occurs at low densities. However, it continues to occur over a large range and is not thought to be conservation dependent. Areas, where deforestation occurs, are likely to be vacated by this species, which is perhaps the only widespread threat faced by this owl.
Still no car, but there's been a certain amount of movement on the process. So in lieu of any adventures, I spent most of my day at home using an AI art generator to create various forms of sexy eldritch cryptids.
Spot-bellied Eagle Owl
The spot-bellied eagle-owl (Bubo nipalensis), also known as the forest eagle-owl is a large bird of prey with a formidable appearance. It is a forest-inhabiting species found in the Indian Subcontinent and Southeast Asia. This species is considered part of a superspecies with the barred eagle-owl (Bubo sumatranus), which looks quite similar but is allopatric in distribution, replacing the larger spot-bellied species in the southern end of the Malay Peninsula and the larger island in Southeast Asia extending down to Borneo.
The spot-bellied eagle-owl is a large species of owl. It measures from 50 to 65 cm (20 to 26 in) in length. It is the sixth longest owl in the world on average and has the ninth longest wings of any living owl. The ear-tufts of the spot-bellied are very long and conspicuously of variable length, giving them a somewhat scraggly appearance at the tips. The ear-tufts of the spot-bellied eagle-owl measure up to 63 to 76 mm (2.5 to 3.0 in) in length. Most eagle-owls are well-feathered on both their leg and toes, while the barred eagle-owl is featherless on the toes and feathered on the legs, and the spot-bellied eagle-owl has feathered legs and feet, but the terminal digits of the toes are bare before the talons. The feet and talons as formidable as any eagle-owl, being very large, heavy and powerful for their size.
The spot-bellied eagle-owl is overall a stark, grayish brown bird, with dark, coarse brown coloration over the back and upper wings. The throat and underparts are mainly pale fulvous in color with black and white horizontal stripes along the flanks of the body that become broad spots on the abdomen and under tail coverts. On the wings, the primaries are dark brown with lighter brown stripes and the secondaries are more heavily barred with buff-brown coloration. The lores are covered in bristly feathers and the cheeks are brownish-white with black feather shafts. The large ear tufts slant off to the sides.
This owl is noted for its strange, human-sounding call, and it has been suggested that it is the same as the cryptid known as ulama or "Devil Bird" in Sri Lanka. A local name is Maha Bakamuna ("large horned owl"). According to www.cryptozoology.com, in July 2001 it was confirmed that ulama description perfectly matches spot-bellied eagle-owl. This call consists of a scream, which rises and then falls in tone. The territorial call of the species, like that of most other eagle-owls, consists of low hoots with two-second intervals between hoos. The voice is booming, deep and carries quite far. It is usual for forest-dwelling owls (and many different kinds of birds) to have an extensive and complex range of vocalizations since vision is more limited than in open or semi-open habitats. However, the spot-bellied eagle owl has relatively small ear openings even for a member of the genus Bubo, suggesting that some territorial behaviour is carried out visually instead of auditorily.
This species is distributed the Lower Himalayas from Kumaon east to Burma, thence to central Laos and central Vietnam. They are found throughout the Indian subcontinent and peninsular Southeast Asia down into the southernmost limits of the range in Sri Lanka and to 12 degrees north in southern Thailand. The spot-bellied eagle-owl dwells mainly in primary or older second growth forests. Potentially, they can come to inhabit nearly all varieties of land-based habitats but prefer those such as dense, evergreen forests or moist deciduous forests within its range, though can range secondarily into tropical valleys, terrai and shola in the lower hills of India. Although often considered uncommon to somewhat rare, recent photographic evidence indicates that they are particularly widely found in different parts of India and may simply avoid detection, so long as appropriate wooded habitat remains.
The spot-bellied eagle-owl is nocturnal and often spends its day hidden in the dense foliage of large forest trees. However, they have been observed on the move and even hunting during the day, especially in forests with minimal human disturbance. Their activity normally picks up at dusk as they begin to hunt. This species is generally uncommon, likely needing large hunting and breeding territories and thus occurs at low densities. However, it continues to occur over a large range and is not thought to be conservation dependent. Areas, where deforestation occurs, are likely to be vacated by this species, which is perhaps the only widespread threat faced by this owl.
Visit www.jhmcreationz.com/Things-to-Do to check out all of the attractions we have visited and photographed!!!
Stay connected with us!
www.instagram.com/jhmcreationz/
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www.youtube.com/user/fallangel316
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www.flickr.com/photos/fallangelproductions/
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Live, Believe & Dream! See You There!
Cryptozoology figures from the Unidentified Mystery Animal, Collect Club, and Great Mystery Museum Collections
Spot-bellied Eagle Owl
The spot-bellied eagle-owl (Bubo nipalensis), also known as the forest eagle-owl is a large bird of prey with a formidable appearance. It is a forest-inhabiting species found in the Indian Subcontinent and Southeast Asia. This species is considered part of a superspecies with the barred eagle-owl (Bubo sumatranus), which looks quite similar but is allopatric in distribution, replacing the larger spot-bellied species in the southern end of the Malay Peninsula and the larger island in Southeast Asia extending down to Borneo.
The spot-bellied eagle-owl is a large species of owl. It measures from 50 to 65 cm (20 to 26 in) in length. It is the sixth longest owl in the world on average and has the ninth longest wings of any living owl. The ear-tufts of the spot-bellied are very long and conspicuously of variable length, giving them a somewhat scraggly appearance at the tips. The ear-tufts of the spot-bellied eagle-owl measure up to 63 to 76 mm (2.5 to 3.0 in) in length. Most eagle-owls are well-feathered on both their leg and toes, while the barred eagle-owl is featherless on the toes and feathered on the legs, and the spot-bellied eagle-owl has feathered legs and feet, but the terminal digits of the toes are bare before the talons. The feet and talons as formidable as any eagle-owl, being very large, heavy and powerful for their size.
The spot-bellied eagle-owl is overall a stark, grayish brown bird, with dark, coarse brown coloration over the back and upper wings. The throat and underparts are mainly pale fulvous in color with black and white horizontal stripes along the flanks of the body that become broad spots on the abdomen and under tail coverts. On the wings, the primaries are dark brown with lighter brown stripes and the secondaries are more heavily barred with buff-brown coloration. The lores are covered in bristly feathers and the cheeks are brownish-white with black feather shafts. The large ear tufts slant off to the sides.
This owl is noted for its strange, human-sounding call, and it has been suggested that it is the same as the cryptid known as ulama or "Devil Bird" in Sri Lanka. A local name is Maha Bakamuna ("large horned owl"). According to www.cryptozoology.com, in July 2001 it was confirmed that ulama description perfectly matches spot-bellied eagle-owl. This call consists of a scream, which rises and then falls in tone. The territorial call of the species, like that of most other eagle-owls, consists of low hoots with two-second intervals between hoos. The voice is booming, deep and carries quite far. It is usual for forest-dwelling owls (and many different kinds of birds) to have an extensive and complex range of vocalizations since vision is more limited than in open or semi-open habitats. However, the spot-bellied eagle owl has relatively small ear openings even for a member of the genus Bubo, suggesting that some territorial behaviour is carried out visually instead of auditorily.
This species is distributed the Lower Himalayas from Kumaon east to Burma, thence to central Laos and central Vietnam. They are found throughout the Indian subcontinent and peninsular Southeast Asia down into the southernmost limits of the range in Sri Lanka and to 12 degrees north in southern Thailand. The spot-bellied eagle-owl dwells mainly in primary or older second growth forests. Potentially, they can come to inhabit nearly all varieties of land-based habitats but prefer those such as dense, evergreen forests or moist deciduous forests within its range, though can range secondarily into tropical valleys, terrai and shola in the lower hills of India. Although often considered uncommon to somewhat rare, recent photographic evidence indicates that they are particularly widely found in different parts of India and may simply avoid detection, so long as appropriate wooded habitat remains.
The spot-bellied eagle-owl is nocturnal and often spends its day hidden in the dense foliage of large forest trees. However, they have been observed on the move and even hunting during the day, especially in forests with minimal human disturbance. Their activity normally picks up at dusk as they begin to hunt. This species is generally uncommon, likely needing large hunting and breeding territories and thus occurs at low densities. However, it continues to occur over a large range and is not thought to be conservation dependent. Areas, where deforestation occurs, are likely to be vacated by this species, which is perhaps the only widespread threat faced by this owl.
It’s been a very long time since my last post here, just wanted to share that there’s just 1 day left to check out my Kickstarter featuring a handmade Bigfoot diorama: www.kickstarter.com/projects/-vlad/make-100-sasquatch-dio...
Thanks for looking!
In this, the epic conclusion of the DANG trilogy, DANG IT!
the Cryptid Crew traverses the terrain of HECK to rescue
Uncle Corny from the fiery clutches of the DeadRedDude
and his evil robot minions!
for the Threadless.com Summer Sequel Alumni Challenge.
Visit www.jhmcreationz.com/Things-to-Do to check out all of the attractions we have visited and photographed!!!
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Live, Believe & Dream! See You There!
created in NIGHTCAFE - DreamShaper v8
prints available: fineartamerica.com/featured/general-peckerhead-in-purgato...
TEXT ONLY
For the prompt and the title I took the clue from an old analog drawing of mine. But I expanded the prompt with a description of another painting from the eighties, which included all kinds of sea creatures as uniform decorations.
The first image in this series was created with Contemporary Surreal. Much later I duplicated it , text only, for a challenge.
I liked the idea so much, I ran several different versions in different modes, some with text only, some with a seed image. The results were largely very interesting, so eventually I made a special collection for it. Check it out here: creator.nightcafe.studio/collection/KjkvnAI1xX91rYwWggRr - from time to time I may add more.
PROMPT:
Portrait of Old Man General Peckerhead in Purgatory; golden helmet, uniform decorated with crustaceans, Alphonse Mucha, h.r.giger, cryptid taxidermy, Bogomil's Universe, imperial colors, surreal fantasy
All pictures taken at "Sovereigns of Elyona - Medieval Fantasy RP" @ maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Forest%20Song/24/217/2999
Visit www.jhmcreationz.com/Things-to-Do to check out all of the attractions we have visited and photographed!!!
Stay connected with us!
www.instagram.com/jhmcreationz/
YouTube
www.youtube.com/user/fallangel316
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www.flickr.com/photos/fallangelproductions/
www.pinterest.com/JHMCREATIONZ/boards/
500px
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www.facebook.com/people/JHM-Creationz/100080810857739/
Live, Believe & Dream! See You There!
Calabria
For STIFF @ CRYPTID event maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Banished%20Souls/129/183/1611
For eBODY REBORN ♥♥
Flickr • www.flickr.com/photos/j0rd_ragnarok/54468433126/in/datepo...
Blog • jordragnarok.blogspot.com/2025/04/calabria.html
Primfeed • www.primfeed.com/jord.amethyst/posts/a0c46367-69c8-4cad-8...
Facebook • www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=122130323912636251&set=a...
Visit www.jhmcreationz.com/Things-to-Do to check out all of the attractions we have visited and photographed!!!
Stay connected with us!
www.instagram.com/jhmcreationz/
YouTube
www.youtube.com/user/fallangel316
Flickr
www.flickr.com/photos/fallangelproductions/
www.pinterest.com/JHMCREATIONZ/boards/
500px
www.pinterest.com/JHMCREATIONZ/
www.facebook.com/people/JHM-Creationz/100080810857739/
Live, Believe & Dream! See You There!
Visit www.jhmcreationz.com/Things-to-Do to check out all of the attractions we have visited and photographed!!!
Stay connected with us!
www.instagram.com/jhmcreationz/
YouTube
www.youtube.com/user/fallangel316
Flickr
www.flickr.com/photos/fallangelproductions/
www.pinterest.com/JHMCREATIONZ/boards/
500px
www.pinterest.com/JHMCREATIONZ/
www.facebook.com/people/JHM-Creationz/100080810857739/
Live, Believe & Dream! See You There!
Visit www.jhmcreationz.com/Things-to-Do to check out all of the attractions we have visited and photographed!!!
Stay connected with us!
www.instagram.com/jhmcreationz/
YouTube
www.youtube.com/user/fallangel316
Flickr
www.flickr.com/photos/fallangelproductions/
www.pinterest.com/JHMCREATIONZ/boards/
500px
www.pinterest.com/JHMCREATIONZ/
www.facebook.com/people/JHM-Creationz/100080810857739/
Live, Believe & Dream! See You There!
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chupacabra
Chupacabra (also Chupacabras /tʃupa'kabɾas/, from Spanish chupar: to suck, cabra: goat; goat sucker) is a legendary cryptid rumored to inhabit parts of the Americas. It is associated more recently with sightings of an allegedly unknown animal in Puerto Rico (where these sightings were first reported), Mexico, and the United States, especially in the latter's Latin American communities.[1] The name comes from the animal's reported habit of attacking and drinking the blood of livestock, especially goats. Physical descriptions of the creature vary. Eyewitness sightings have been claimed as early as 1990 in Puerto Rico, and have since been reported as far north as Maine, and as far south as Chile. It is supposedly a heavy creature, the size of a small bear, with a row of spines reaching from the neck to the base of the tail. Most biologists and wildlife management officials view the chupacabra as an urban legend.[2]
Eyewitness reports of this mythical animal claim that the run as fast as a cheetah and a cheetah can reach speeds of up to 75 MPH (120 miles per kilometer)
And you thought they didn't exist. So I pay my 2.00 to go in a trailer to discover that it's a paper mache in a glass case. That 2.00 also went to see other crap that doesn't really exist either such as a mongolian death worm and other strange oddities.
DAmn my morbid curiosity. I knew it wasan't real, but it's like a train wreck. You don't want to look, but can't help yourself.
Submitted for August's MSH # 13 - Faster
Submitted for July's MSH # 13 - Thriller
A free iPhone wallpaper to go with your Mermaid iPhone case, available via heymakoshark.tumblr.com
HOW TO DOWNLOAD THIS TO YOUR iPHONE: from THIS page, simply hold your finger down on the photo and you will be given the option to SAVE IMAGE. The photo will then be saved to your camera roll. You can then assign it to your lock screen and/or wallpaper from your camera roll or from your iPhone settings. Enjoy!