I created paper animals for a recent Saturday with a Scientist program at the Bell Museum. They were used to help teach visitors about venom resistance in mammals! All critters were hand cut and assembled out of colored paper, and backed with corrugated cardboard to provide rigidity for display.
I created paper animals for a recent Saturday with a Scientist program at the Bell Museum. They were used to help teach visitors about venom resistance in mammals! All critters were hand cut and assembled out of colored paper, and backed with corrugated cardboard to provide rigidity for display.
I created paper animals for a recent Saturday with a Scientist program at the Bell Museum. They were used to help teach visitors about venom resistance in mammals! All critters were hand cut and assembled out of colored paper, and backed with corrugated cardboard to provide rigidity for display.
I created paper animals for a recent Saturday with a Scientist program at the Bell Museum. They were used to help teach visitors about venom resistance in mammals! All critters were hand cut and assembled out of colored paper, and backed with corrugated cardboard to provide rigidity for display.
I created paper animals for a recent Saturday with a Scientist program at the Bell Museum. They were used to help teach visitors about venom resistance in mammals! All critters were hand cut and assembled out of colored paper, and backed with corrugated cardboard to provide rigidity for display.
I created paper animals for a recent Saturday with a Scientist program at the Bell Museum. They were used to help teach visitors about venom resistance in mammals! All critters were hand cut and assembled out of colored paper, and backed with corrugated cardboard to provide rigidity for display.
I created paper animals for a recent Saturday with a Scientist program at the Bell Museum. They were used to help teach visitors about venom resistance in mammals! All critters were hand cut and assembled out of colored paper, and backed with corrugated cardboard to provide rigidity for display.
I created paper animals for a recent Saturday with a Scientist program at the Bell Museum. They were used to help teach visitors about venom resistance in mammals! All critters were hand cut and assembled out of colored paper, and backed with corrugated cardboard to provide rigidity for display.
Plains visacha (Lagostomus maximus) lower mandible and vertebrae. Drawn from a Bell Museum specimen. Ink on 9"x12" sketchbook paper.
Scapula, clavicle, and humerus articulation in several primates. Drawn from Bell Museum mounted skeletal specimens in ink on 9"x12" sketchbook paper.
Atlantic walrus (Odobenus rosmarus) skull. Drawn from a Bell Museum specimen. Ink on 9"x12" sketchbook paper.
A polyphemus moth I painted at a Bell Museum Sketch Night. Watercolor on 9"x12" watercolor paper.
Study of a raccoon (Procyon lotor) scapula. This drawing shows a single scapula from multiple angles, drawn in ink on 9"x12" sketchbook paper.
Dall sheep (Ovis dalli) eye. Drawn from a Bell Museum mounted specimen. Ink on 9"x12" sketchbook paper.
Kiwi (Apteryx sp.) skull and cervical vertebrae (Bell Museum specimen). Ink on 9"x12" sketchbook paper.
Steenbok (Raphicerus campestris). Drawn from a Bell Museum shoulder mount. Ink on 9"x12" sketchbook paper.
Three-toed sloth (Bradypus sp). Drawn from a Bell Museum mounted skeletal specimen. Ink on 9"x12" sketchbook paper.
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