Comments: 169
dttb6296 [2022-11-06 03:53:53 +0000 UTC]
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s7255 [2021-04-08 01:33:47 +0000 UTC]
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silverdusk554 [2018-01-03 20:15:16 +0000 UTC]
You should do Saphira blue dragon blue eyes, Gleadr golden dragon yellow eyes, Thorn red dragon red eyes, Firnen green dragon with green eyes, and Shruikan black dragon black eyes, from Eragon! I'm sure since you did this good on that dragon you would do an even better job on those dragons!
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quitra [2017-09-11 13:29:45 +0000 UTC]
I know this isn't historical, but you should do Drogon from Game of Thrones.
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Eriarte [2017-08-30 05:54:30 +0000 UTC]
this in a new level of art, this is 110% awesome
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Mmkaay [2017-07-17 00:24:25 +0000 UTC]
This is such simple composition and lighting... idk why I enjoy looking at it so much...wonderful job
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Bbabazze [2017-06-24 16:36:36 +0000 UTC]
no © copyright on your fabulous work ? which mean, I am allow to use it in a youtube video ?
I would give the link for your deviant art account, of course.
I have some idea of musique, and your epic monsters would be good to put a picture on my music. Nothing is done, just a project.
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Mattoosaurus [2017-06-16 19:08:01 +0000 UTC]
I very much so intend on picking up this book, having already picked up Dinosaurs vs. Beasts at a book fair (I would've picked up this book too, but I didn't have enough with me at the time). The only dragons I can think of that were sadly left out of this book are the Quetzalcoatl, Leviathan, Amphithere, Drake and Basilisk.
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brittsb [2017-05-02 20:32:04 +0000 UTC]
Astounding painting!
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NemesisWonderland [2017-04-23 01:05:34 +0000 UTC]
Any dragon myths I want to see, definitely the red Welsh dragon vs. the white Saxon dragon.
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urzapw2000 [2017-04-17 03:57:58 +0000 UTC]
that is one awesome looking dragon!!!
the large center horn is interesting in that it suggests that the dragon fights physically against a larger foe
perhaps dragons of this type fight each other for dominance?
great picture!
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luxidoptera [2017-04-15 20:32:35 +0000 UTC]
What a pal!
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Inlokvith [2017-04-15 07:11:13 +0000 UTC]
maybe a Coatl species? amphitheres?
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notpongkong [2017-03-22 16:03:11 +0000 UTC]
gorgonopsid dragon i dig it
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xHelloBeautifulx [2017-03-20 10:07:25 +0000 UTC]
Holy, epically magnificent! This Majestic Svara is stunning and The Castle looks incredible! The designs, wings, ears, horns, tail, claws, eyes, teeth, scales, spikes, expression, pose, sky, clouds, tower, arches, mist, shadows, sunlight, rays, shadows, symbols, anatomy, dust, structure, action, gleam, glow, haze, movement, flow, effects, realisticness, perspective, atmosphere, textures, hues, concept, composition, uniqueness, lighting, colors, style, and other details are also outstanding! Amazingly radical work!
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Avisrex [2017-03-15 04:04:43 +0000 UTC]
I recall at least one native american dragon... or two if we count the jersey devil depending on design.
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nightshade1208 [2017-03-08 10:17:53 +0000 UTC]
i would really love to see an interpretation of the jabbawock, i know its a wyvern and not a dragon but its still very interesting and i would love to see it done by you
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nightshade1208 In reply to arvalis [2017-03-08 23:56:04 +0000 UTC]
they are a sub species i guess, but i wouldnt say they are "true dragons"
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silverdusk554 In reply to nightshade1208 [2018-01-03 20:20:16 +0000 UTC]
Wyverns dont have forlegs though. They only have have wing arms!
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arvalis In reply to nightshade1208 [2017-03-09 00:21:49 +0000 UTC]
No, they are absolutely dragons. Think of dragons as a clade and wyverns can be an order, suborder, or family within said clade.
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silverdusk554 In reply to arvalis [2018-01-03 20:20:47 +0000 UTC]
I agree though! they certanly are dragons!
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adamgrogory [2017-03-05 15:06:25 +0000 UTC]
I can't seem to find this creature anywhere. Where's it from?
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Luniers [2017-03-03 17:41:50 +0000 UTC]
Where does this myth originate from?
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NAGA909 In reply to CatHanAnd [2017-03-03 14:14:07 +0000 UTC]
In Norse Mythology there is an actual dragon, Nidhogg the Corpse-Eater, he lies beneath Yggdrasil, gnawing at its roots.
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VovinaArt In reply to CatHanAnd [2017-03-07 21:17:57 +0000 UTC]
Interesting. In all the Norse Mythology-inspired literature I've read, Nidhogg is always referred to as a dragon.
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NAGA909 In reply to CatHanAnd [2017-03-03 14:51:36 +0000 UTC]
In some texts Jormundgandr and Nidhogg are two seperate beings, Jormundgandr circles around the Midgard Ocean and Nidhogg bites at the roots of Yggdrasil.
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VovinaArt In reply to NAGA909 [2017-03-07 21:14:13 +0000 UTC]
I've always heard of them as separate creatures.
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VovinaArt In reply to CatHanAnd [2017-03-07 21:17:25 +0000 UTC]
I dunno if this helps, but Wikipedia's page on Nidhogg - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/N%C3%AD&… has a 17th century Icelandic illustration of him that depicts him as a two-legged dragon.
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VovinaArt In reply to CatHanAnd [2017-03-08 08:22:42 +0000 UTC]
I'm jealous. The only way I can learn about Nordic history and culture is through mythology and history books and websites (of questionable accuracy) like Wikipedia. I learned a bit about the Vikings in high-school history, but only from the perspective of the Anglo-Saxons.
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VovinaArt In reply to CatHanAnd [2017-03-08 09:48:31 +0000 UTC]
Heh. I had to do that in university for a course on Old English.
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CatHanAnd In reply to VovinaArt [2017-03-08 07:39:35 +0000 UTC]
I Think the closest thing to a dragon we have is actually Fåvne. I'm not sure if it's right in relation to the old text, but on the wiki it says: er en voldsom drage eller slange which means a really big Dragon or Snake. But since they say OR snake, makes me think that in the original text he is said to be a snake like creature.
The text on wiki is also related to a opera of Wagner so they may have called him a dragon in the opera and not the original text. Richard Wagner was also German... He may have called Fåvne a dragon in his play for the same reason they translate it in english.
I must say I have never used so much of what I learned in fourth to six grade so much ever! :-D
-Cat
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CatHanAnd In reply to VovinaArt [2017-03-08 07:20:30 +0000 UTC]
I think it is actually a translation thing. Witch is kinda funny.
We have two words for snake in Norway the common SLANGE and the older one that is not really used that much ORM. On the Norwegian Wiki it does not say anything about either Nidhogg or anything else being a dragon.
Our Norwigan word for Dragon is DRAGE witch is what makes me think that we didn't have the word back in the day and while the illustrations may lead people to think dragon they where never called it. In the original text he is not really described as anything other than a big snake/ORM. I don't even think that they mention him having legs, but they do draw him with it some times. I think it is because then it does not just look like a big snake.
I never knew that other languages called them anything other than Serpent like creatures or something close to ORM. It is really interesting to know the changes that has happened to the texts.
-Cat
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VovinaArt In reply to CatHanAnd [2017-03-08 07:28:38 +0000 UTC]
Hmm. I'm no Norse cultural expert, but in every piece of Norse mythology-inspired fiction I've come across I've only ever heard him described as a dragon.
Speaking of dragons, I wonder whether Fáfnir from the Völsunga Saga and the Nibelungenlied is referred to as a drange or an orm in his monstrous form?
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CatHanAnd In reply to VovinaArt [2017-03-08 07:57:15 +0000 UTC]
I did a search on when Norway got the word Dragon. Is it weird I think this is fun? maybe...
But anyway, It said that we got the word in the middle ages around when Norway was made christen which means we did not have the word when the original texts where written. We where not allowed believing in Norse when we where made christen so anyone calling any creature a dragon must have come later.
But when everybody else was translating and seeing the drawings they would have had the word which may be why they use it inn other languages.
-Cat
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