this is it! i finished it! it took me over 14 hours but i'm done! i've been working in Corel Painter X pretty much just experimenting. i've been looking up numerous pictures of clouds, trees, grasslands, grasses, rocks, etc. to try and get the textures right. while i don't want this to look "photo-realistic" by any means, i want to provide enough visual cues to the viewer, using a modern version of 'tromp l'oeil' - an artistic term meaning to fool the eye.
i worked on the sketch all last evening, about three hours, i think? i've been working on the painting all late morning/early afternoon, about four hours. i'm stretching my poor computer to the limit, so i'm glad i've been saving it constantly. my laptop overheated or something and crashed; luckily it's okay, i'm just going to get one of those cooling pads for it. i took a short break and then worked through the rest of the day until ten o'clock PM.
i think this is good for a full days' work!
onto beastie babble!
*~~*
when male Ore (pronounced OH-reh) reach sexual maturity they are expelled from their herd. many form a bachelor herd that roams between established territories, migrating with the grazers (and the seasonal rains.) since Ore are omnivorous they not only migrate to follow the herds to hunt from them, but also to graze off the numerous fruiting trees and shrubs.
out in the wild on their own the adolescent males learn valuable skills about hunting, grazing, and safe traveling. herds of Ore have multiple territories they travel between during different seasons. dispersal males learn this in small herds of 6-10, when they are strong and experienced enough they leave the bachelor herd and begin trailing established herds.
these two males are likely cousins or brothers. while dispersal males form tight bonds - sometimes nearly verging on homosexual - while living in their bachelor herds, life-long bonds are usually only formed between males that grew up in the same herd as foals.
they have stumbled upon a kill. while most of it has been picked away it leaves valuable clues. upon inspection they will be able to find that young females have scavenged at this site. if they persevere they may be able to track the herd that likely made this kill. once they find it they will be confronted by the lead males.
if they are strong and cunning enough they will be able to steal one - or multiple - mares from the herd. these two young stallions will then take their new brides back into the wilderness to mate and bond with them. this is the most dangerous time of a young Ore's life: the wildernesses of their world are unforgiving, the environments extreme, and predators fierce. if they return to the herd too soon then the mares will reject them and they will be chased out of the herd or possible killed. if they stay in the wilderness too long then they risk starvation or predation.
these young stallions aren't thinking about all that, though. right now they are just concentrating on the hundreds of scent-messages left around the kill.
*~~*
A note on sharing: i'm a firm believer in share and share-alike. while i work ungodly hard on creating these races, i don't think it's any fun if i'm the only one who gets to play with them. it's like if i got a brand new gaming system that was the best ever, but no one else got one.
that's why, as long as i am credited, i would be honored if people make fan art of my creatures. if they pick your interest, go ahead, make a character! try it on!
just make sure you like back to my main-page and credit me for the original idea. also, please show me! i would love to see how people interpret these things.
i worked on the sketch all last evening, about three hours, i think? i've been working on the painting all late morning/early afternoon, about four hours. i'm stretching my poor computer to the limit, so i'm glad i've been saving it constantly. my laptop overheated or something and crashed; luckily it's okay, i'm just going to get one of those cooling pads for it. i took a short break and then worked through the rest of the day until ten o'clock PM.
i think this is good for a full days' work!
onto beastie babble!
*~~*
when male Ore (pronounced OH-reh) reach sexual maturity they are expelled from their herd. many form a bachelor herd that roams between established territories, migrating with the grazers (and the seasonal rains.) since Ore are omnivorous they not only migrate to follow the herds to hunt from them, but also to graze off the numerous fruiting trees and shrubs.
out in the wild on their own the adolescent males learn valuable skills about hunting, grazing, and safe traveling. herds of Ore have multiple territories they travel between during different seasons. dispersal males learn this in small herds of 6-10, when they are strong and experienced enough they leave the bachelor herd and begin trailing established herds.
these two males are likely cousins or brothers. while dispersal males form tight bonds - sometimes nearly verging on homosexual - while living in their bachelor herds, life-long bonds are usually only formed between males that grew up in the same herd as foals.
they have stumbled upon a kill. while most of it has been picked away it leaves valuable clues. upon inspection they will be able to find that young females have scavenged at this site. if they persevere they may be able to track the herd that likely made this kill. once they find it they will be confronted by the lead males.
if they are strong and cunning enough they will be able to steal one - or multiple - mares from the herd. these two young stallions will then take their new brides back into the wilderness to mate and bond with them. this is the most dangerous time of a young Ore's life: the wildernesses of their world are unforgiving, the environments extreme, and predators fierce. if they return to the herd too soon then the mares will reject them and they will be chased out of the herd or possible killed. if they stay in the wilderness too long then they risk starvation or predation.
these young stallions aren't thinking about all that, though. right now they are just concentrating on the hundreds of scent-messages left around the kill.
*~~*
A note on sharing: i'm a firm believer in share and share-alike. while i work ungodly hard on creating these races, i don't think it's any fun if i'm the only one who gets to play with them. it's like if i got a brand new gaming system that was the best ever, but no one else got one.
that's why, as long as i am credited, i would be honored if people make fan art of my creatures. if they pick your interest, go ahead, make a character! try it on!
just make sure you like back to my main-page and credit me for the original idea. also, please show me! i would love to see how people interpret these things.
Category Artwork (Digital) / Animal related (non-anthro)
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 850 x 637px
File Size 416.6 kB
the clouds were some of the most fun i had in this picture. i spent a good fifteen to twenty minutes on Google looking at different pictures of cloud formations and trying to plan how different tools such as digital airbrush or digital pastels would handle the colors and textures. of course i found that the airbrush works the best.
one of these days i want to do a giant painting of clouds and dragons in oils. i want it to rival some of the Boroque pieces we have at the local art museum. that means that it's going to need to be at least thirteen feet tall <3
these guys would be awesome to photograph, but you're right: gaining their trust would be much, much harder than wild horses. if you spent enough time trailing them they might eventually accept your presence as an inevitability, just like horses. however, being territorial and semi-predatory, they might also see your presence as a threat and try to run you out, or simply run away themselves.
maybe one day i'll make a sketch of Foxystallion exploring this strange world, cataloging animals, plants, and weather and geological anomalies when he comes upon a herd of these guys. maybe he spends the rest of his trip gaining their trust and traveling with them :)
one of these days i want to do a giant painting of clouds and dragons in oils. i want it to rival some of the Boroque pieces we have at the local art museum. that means that it's going to need to be at least thirteen feet tall <3
these guys would be awesome to photograph, but you're right: gaining their trust would be much, much harder than wild horses. if you spent enough time trailing them they might eventually accept your presence as an inevitability, just like horses. however, being territorial and semi-predatory, they might also see your presence as a threat and try to run you out, or simply run away themselves.
maybe one day i'll make a sketch of Foxystallion exploring this strange world, cataloging animals, plants, and weather and geological anomalies when he comes upon a herd of these guys. maybe he spends the rest of his trip gaining their trust and traveling with them :)
Wow! I'd love to see that!! I'll have to send you a couple of photos of me with my wildlife photography cameras and telephoto lenses. One is really big, the other humongous (about 10 pounds and roughly two feet long).
This is what a wild horse alpha mare who has known me for all her life thought when she saw me with the big one for the first time:
http://www.furaffinity.net/view/2389944/
A perfect WTF?, dilated nostrils and all.
This is what a wild horse alpha mare who has known me for all her life thought when she saw me with the big one for the first time:
http://www.furaffinity.net/view/2389944/
A perfect WTF?, dilated nostrils and all.
i'm having fun imagining their sheer amazement at seeing something their entire world had never seen before. Ore are as intelligent as chimps; but with a completely different psychology and mental development, their reaction would be entirely different. it's stimulating for me to think of an animal that is essentially an omnivorous horse in development but chimp in intelligence reaction to your presence.
They will be able to tell by my scent that I'm an omnivore, too. If their sex hormone system is likt that of earth animals, they will be able to tell that I'm a dominant male, too. If their system is a bit different, they might think that I'm a female in heat, which could be more than a little inconvenient...
this is very true. since their evolution has basically been a divergent version of Terran evolution they would share many - if not all - hormonal and pheramonal cues with us. while they wouldn't recognize you visually, their other senses would tell them that you might end up being trustworthy, or even an asset to their herd.
it's fun to talk about "fake" biology with you ^_^
it's fun to talk about "fake" biology with you ^_^
Oh Awesome! <3!! It's amazing how often i see chestnut colored horses, but how they always have different markings, when i saw this guy i was like "oh wow!" Because it was totally Skippy! incarnate as an Ore! I love fun coincidences like that! XD
Thanks for naming him after Skippy!, that's really really sweet of you! I'm totally +faving this!
Thanks for naming him after Skippy!, that's really really sweet of you! I'm totally +faving this!
FA+

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