(From the left)
1. Sunglow, ~62", Male, "Starburst"
2. Pearl Gold, ~ 47", Female, "Maple"
3. Red, ~46", Female, Unnamed, sold
4. Burgundy, ~49", Male, "Waffles"
5. Moonglow, ~50", Female, "Mercury"
1. Sunglow, ~62", Male, "Starburst"
2. Pearl Gold, ~ 47", Female, "Maple"
3. Red, ~46", Female, Unnamed, sold
4. Burgundy, ~49", Male, "Waffles"
5. Moonglow, ~50", Female, "Mercury"
Category All / All
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 1169 x 946px
File Size 2.05 MB
I think I asked out of curiosity towards how a majority of the animals in your gallery die.
Not to imply it's done inhumanely!
I actually admire taxidermists and the work that goes into their trade. I could never do it myself, my sewing is like a march of drunken ants.
I knew a boy in school who went into taxidermy after doing a project on it, and he explained most of how it was done, but not how he got his animals.
I imagine that ones that have been shot or hit by cars sustain some-if not a lot- of damage to their appearance, and I'm amazed that in cases like that people can clean them up so well.
Not to imply it's done inhumanely!
I actually admire taxidermists and the work that goes into their trade. I could never do it myself, my sewing is like a march of drunken ants.
I knew a boy in school who went into taxidermy after doing a project on it, and he explained most of how it was done, but not how he got his animals.
I imagine that ones that have been shot or hit by cars sustain some-if not a lot- of damage to their appearance, and I'm amazed that in cases like that people can clean them up so well.
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