This one's been burning it's way through my grey-matter for a while, now. This budding relationship between me and KaniS and Royelle, has me drawing some pretty neat things. I will colour this, but I thought I'd post the inks anyway. Want to do a more complex, watercolour version- it'll have to be larger, to do that effectively, I think. The original of this is only about 4" x 4" Might make a cool tattoo... KaniS is ©
kanis and Royelle is ©
royelle Murra is © myself.
kanis and Royelle is ©
royelle Murra is © myself.
Category Artwork (Traditional) / Miscellaneous
Species Western Dragon
Size 980 x 953px
File Size 469.6 kB
I've done that! Got a sweet little piece I did a couple of years ago that I did in a river stone with a natural hole in it. Carved the knot, then painted it this crazy, iridescent purple... Made a pendant out of it. Looks seriously cool. Maybe I should take a picture of it and post it... Thanks for the reminder!
eventualy ill have the $ to get another this gave me ideas for what id like
the trio of dragons but done like the inuit do their totem designs i saw a gent the other day with an armband of orca and dolphins done in the inuit style the stark black with red and blue some white very striking
the trio of dragons but done like the inuit do their totem designs i saw a gent the other day with an armband of orca and dolphins done in the inuit style the stark black with red and blue some white very striking
Actually, you're talking about Haida and Tlingit work (west-coat peoples), I think- I've done some stuff in that style... Beautiful stuff- very graphic and lends itself to printing and tattoos. Inuit work is very free-form, nowhere near as structured... The red, black, blue and white are traditional colours used by most of the northern and western Tribes... *waves a wing, grinning* ...Like mine; the Innu.
Thanks for liking this! If you're interested in tattoos, maybe we could talk? I might be able to come up with something you like.
Thanks for liking this! If you're interested in tattoos, maybe we could talk? I might be able to come up with something you like.
:) im part cherrokee so the style calls to me i guess, sorry for the mis labling
i found the truth of once youve been inked you want more its true oh so verily!! the one i do have is a ying yang of a dragon and a unicorn 6inch medalion on my shoulder custom made was meant to be colored but the gent was wrongly acused by an ex and the law decided to put him back behind iron :( i still want to get it colored
i dont have any funds at the moment i wouldnt ask for any thing unless i could pay
i found the truth of once youve been inked you want more its true oh so verily!! the one i do have is a ying yang of a dragon and a unicorn 6inch medalion on my shoulder custom made was meant to be colored but the gent was wrongly acused by an ex and the law decided to put him back behind iron :( i still want to get it colored
i dont have any funds at the moment i wouldnt ask for any thing unless i could pay
No worries- just fishing for commish, me- I'm poor. If you did artwork, we could do a trade- I like doing those, too. Heh. As for Aboriginal ancestry, I'm really only part Innu- the rest of my ancestry is French. Me mum's only got a quarter blood- which makes me a mere eighth (assuming my father was all caucasian, and not Metis, like us, which could put a wrinkle in the ratio- I could potentially have more ancestry than my mother!). Heh. Still got some of the colouring, though, and the big, slanted eyes us Cree call "wolf-eyes". In case you're wondering, the Innu are a Cree group, NOT Inuit.
french scotts yugoslav cherrokee mix pour and let set one cyberhorn the dragon 3 parts bad attitiude 1 part over eater all bad with alchahol
im pale but instead of taning i redden and keep a hue of it even into winter
trust me if i had the $ id be looking for design and someone i could trust to do it thats one of the big things for me i walked into 10 places looked around and didnt stay just didnt like the feel of the place or the people
"shrugs" im weird what can i say
im pale but instead of taning i redden and keep a hue of it even into winter
trust me if i had the $ id be looking for design and someone i could trust to do it thats one of the big things for me i walked into 10 places looked around and didnt stay just didnt like the feel of the place or the people
"shrugs" im weird what can i say
That's a pretty neat mix, there. I have an attitude, too- opinions vary on whether it's a bad one. Heh. As for booze, it's already given nothing but misery to too many of my People, including my own grandfather, my mother, and an uncle the stuff pretty much killed. I'm a near-teetotaler. I have a drink or two perhaps twice a year. I turn brown in the sun- takes me hours to actually burn. And there's nuthin' weird about listening to your instincts, man. It's kept ME alive this long, listening to the "pings" the Universe sends me as little heads-up... I hope you do find the artist you want for your ink. I'd love to get into tattoo design, myself- even looked into getting an apprenticeship in a studio (expensive!)... I hear you, finding a decent, reputable studio can be hard- there's still a lot of the "hard-core biker and criminal" feel to some studios.
huffers? inhalers? heck i used to be that way due to work, we had to spraypaint valves some bigger than a chevy truck with rattle cans you tend to get a bit of it unintentionaly but i found over a long weekend i was actualy getting the shakes cause i HAdnt painted any valves im so glad i dont work there anymore
Yeah, inhalers. Solvent-junkies who fill a bottle with glue and some sort of solvent to inhale the fumes. Rots your brain. You see them, staggering down the street, their faces ruined by that life, with their bottle, or soaked kleenexes in their hands, reeking of the stuff. Their minds are gone, and even when they manage to get off the stuff, there isn't much of the person left- permanent brain-damage. It leaves them with the intelligence of a turnip.
*blushes* Thanks, man! Actually, I found an object of the right size, and drew the circle first, then blocked out where I wanted the dragons to be. Celtic knotwork is time-consuming, yes, but there is a technique to it; you build from simple shapes, to make sure you get the right repeats. Then make sure to pay attention to the over-and-under of your "ribbon-work"... I divided the circle into three equal parts, and blocked out the most basic shapes for my figures.
I'd like to be, but circumstances might not allow it to happen. Which is a pity, since I like the both of them rather a lot... I'm a romantic sort, I guess- want to pread the love around... I have no trouble imagining three or more peple in committed, loving relationships.
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