Triceratops 

32 creative works found

  • In a closed-down shop window in Nottingham.

  • A shirt for all dino fans.

  • A baby triceratops!

  • Triceratops

  • On the edge of the herd, looking outward… just Watchful This was my first screenprint, made at Fife (Dunfermline) Printmakers’ Workshop. This image, with the mood it represents, continues to mean a lot to me. I did not seek to show a known species, but rather to portray a representative ceratopsian type of dinosaur. I had it scanned into digital form by this local company, who were very helpful to me as a beginner.. giving excellent service and value for money. Some more background, if you wish: / The intent toward such an image was in my mind for some time, then (in the Print Workshop itself) occurred ‘that special moment’ to sketch it into reality.. a tiny ballpoint-pen sketch, a few inches long, capturing my idea. It was a process then of enlargement and further detailing, and – learning the steps of screenprinting – of preparing a screen to overlay successive colours in selected areas. There were decisions to be made all along the way. I chose to reverse the image relative to my initial sketch: it just felt better facing to the right.

  • 3d digital art render of Triceratops, This is done with the help of my five year old grandson, when he visits he wants to do a dinosaur to sent up to Redbubble. So this is his dinosaur. The other three that I have at redbubble are his also. / Made with bryce 3d

  • Dinosaurs are awesome. I stole the idea from the picture in this article / Image is public domain from a sweet collection of dinosaurs

  • A green stencil design triceratops. What more do you need? Check out my other designs below! /

  • A combination of 2 of my tee designs.

  • Triceratops is an extinct genus of herbivorous ceratopsid dinosaur which lived during the late Maastrichtian stage of the Late Cretaceous Period, around 68 to 65 million years ago (mya) in what is now North America. It was one of the last dinosaur genera to appear before the great Cretaceous–Tertiary extinction event. Bearing a large bony frill and three horns on its large four-legged body, and conjuring similarities with the modern rhinoceros, Triceratops is one of the most recognizable of all dinosaurs. Although it shared the landscape with and was preyed upon by the fearsome Tyrannosaurus, it is unclear whether the two battled the way they are commonly depicted in movies, children’s dinosaur books and many cartoons. A complete Triceratops skeleton has yet to be found, however the animal is well-known from numerous partial remains collected since the introduction of the genus in 1887. The function of their frills and three distinctive facial horns has long inspired debate. Although traditionally viewed as defensive weapons against predators, the latest theories claim that it is more probable that these features were used in courtship and dominance displays, much like the antlers and horns of modern reindeer, mountain goats, or rhinoceros beetles. Triceratops is the best-known of the ceratopsids, though the genus’s exact placement within the group has been a point of contention amongst paleontologists. Two species, T. horridus and T. prorsus, are considered valid, although many other species have been named.

  • Little known fact about the Triceratops is they love to dance; not just tap dancing but anything from ballet to the polka. As a species they were the first to invent the “Talent Show” where many a young dinosaur found their fame; going on to star in many classic movies. This illustration was done for a new Flickr monthly challenge group – Illustrapedia. This month Dinosaurs. ;-))

  • It’s a tip-tap tap dancin’ dinosaur

  • A dinosaur with lots of horns.

  • Toy shop window, NYC, ‘08 reworked digitally. / /

  • Triceratops

  • Sketch of a Triceratops in Graphite on A4.

  • Sketch of a Triceratops in Graphite on A4, then digital coloured in using Adobe Photoshop.

  • Sketch of Triceratops then digitally coloured in using Photoshop

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