This is Elliot. He refuses to accept the fact that winter is over. The flowers are blooming, but he just keeps on making snowmen. I have a series of these monsters that I’m going to be postin…
Quite the spider fatale. Beauty is not the only deadly thing about Evaranae. Her venom will literally kill you before you can do anything about it, so try not to be distracted by those intense green eyes. First released as a special gem offer (2015) Seven Deadly Sins Maze (2017) Steampunk Beasts Island (2018) Hunters Maze (2018)
Funny monster character cartoons, flat icons. The attached zipped folder had Ai, EPS, and JPG. Perfect for design projects.
I just finished making a few stocking stuffers for Baby B and little gifts for some of his little friends! If you crochet you still have time to whip a few up to hide in stockings for Christmas morning! (Baby B's friends, look away! :) Little boys love little monsters, right? And so do their little friends? I sure hope so! I used the tutorial by Crafty is Cool to make a whole...herd?...flock?....of monsters. I started with a set for Baby B, using the nice monster-colored yarns I found at a yard sale this summer. (the red one was my prototype. Note to self: 8mm eyes are too big. go for the 6mm.) They were pretty fast to put together, once I go the hang of it, so I made a few extras for Baby B's friends. (I made them different heights by doing more or less rows of stitches) I gave them each a unique expression using plastic safety eyes, white felt, and black embroidery floss. Here are the little guys watching me working and waiting to get their mouths.... Then they were stuffed with polyfil to be nice, squishy little friends. Some of them even have feet! And I added a felt tooth here and there. Oh, and I put love in the stitches. You could also add little hairbows to make girl monsters, but all of these monsters are for little boys so no hairbows here! They will be a fun way to fill Baby B's stocking for Christmas. And they will make cute tiny gifts for his friends! And of course when they grow up being best friends they'll get together every weekend to play with the monsters because of the love in the stitches. Might as well dream big, right? Here is the link to the tutorial again, if you want to make your own little monsters. And now for the star of the show.... "hey, where did my apple go?!" "oh, here it is." "I think it will fit if I open my mouth thiiiiiis wide." hmmm...nice try, Baby B. You leave the cutest teeth marks in that apple! "what's this white stuff?" - Baby B's first snow! "I'm afraid I'm too fluffy...." "These mittens won't stop me! I'll get you yet, Santa!" "Gotcha!" We're having a lot of fun celebrating with decorations, gifts, yummy food, and time with the family, but more importantly we're celebrating the wonderful gift that is the true reason for the season.... "She will give birth to a son, and you are to give him the name Jesus, because he will save his people from their sins." -Matthew 1:21 Remembering this season that we are blessed beyond words. Merry CHRISTmas to all! Pin It
Among the many creatures dreamt up by author H P Lovecraft we find the Byakhee, which is probably one of his weirdest. In his short story "The Festival" they appear as mounts for a strange secret sect, and are described as hybrids with features from such diverse things as bats, moles, birds and decomposing humans. One of Lovecraft's protégés August Derleth also wrote about Byakhees in his story "The Gable Window", but his version of the monster is easier to grasp. I'm building a Byakhee puppet for my video version of Lin Carter's poem "The King In Tatters", and his version of the beast is something in between Lovecraft and Derleth. The sketch above is my concept of the Carter Byakhee, and my guide for the puppet. Medium grade Monster Clay was my material of choice for creating the head. "Black-furred and iron-beaked, with eyes of Hell" is how Carter describes it. I tried to get something that looked loathsome and I took familiar features and did something different with them. Therefore I, for example, put the eyes on the topside of the head, like a bottom-dwelling fish. The head was mostly sculpted with tiny loop tools. The head is cast in a one-piece mold, with the mouth cavity filled up with clay. I try to make most of my molds in one piece. A clay wall is built up around it to hold the plaster around the sculpture. Can't remember what the small cast is, but the bigger one is the Byakhee head. I'm using pink dental stone, which creates very durable molds, and which are also easy to cast latex into. The other body part I sculpted was the underside of the body. Again I'm using Monster Clay medium grade, and various sculpting tools, among them a rubber-tipped tool. My aim with this sculpture was to create an amalgam of different textures, making the body look like it's a hybrid of very different creatures. The sculpture is actually upside down. The warty spiky "back" will be the monster's gut. The head has been cast in black-tinted latex, and attached to an aluminum wire armature using Friendly Plastic thermoplastic. Two reflective read beads are inserted into the latex skin and attached by pressing the soft plastic up behind them, until they stick as the plastic cools. The neck, a length of folded aluminum wire, is divided up in small sections using short steel nails as "vertebrae" held in place with crochet yarn. To get the insect element into the Byakhee physique I'm making its front legs look like the limbs of an ant. I'm sure I could've made the claws in some very simple way, but decided to sculpt them and cast them in plastic using silicone molds. Here's the body sculpt cast in tinted latex and filled with layers of soft polyurethane foam. The ant-like forelegs with the plastic claws waiting to be attached. Friendly plastic holds them in place. The various bits that make up the Byakhee puppet, including the spine. All feet have wing nuts in them to hold tie-down screws. All the limbs, including a stumpy tail are joined with Friendly Plastic. I did attach the belly here, but pulled it off and filled it up with more foam to make it saggier. I've covered wing-making in quite a few of my earlier blog posts, so I'll just rush through the process here. Aluminum wire frames are wrapped in soft string.. And a combination of cotton mixed with latex and polyurethane foam is used to build up muscle shapes. Patches of latex skin are cast in old plaster texture molds and used to cover the muscle build-ups. Here's the skin-covered arm bit of the wings, and the "fingers" have also been covered with tinted liquid latex. The wing membranes are created by submerging the wing halfway down into cheap hobby plaster and when the plaster has set I can sponge on latex between the fingers. When that has dried I just pull the wing out of the plaster. I made the wing membranes a little too dark, so I have painted them with a mix of latex and pigments. And as you can see the belly is now removed. Filling up the belly piece with more foam made the creature look bloated and slightly clumsy when compared to the skinny legs. Time to build up some bulk on the critter. I'm using a thin polyurethane foam which is manufactured to be placed under plate racks in kitchens to soak up moisture. I'm simply wrapping some of it around the neck. The rest of the body and the limbs get a more careful build-up of foam muscle padding. Soft yarn is also used to create certain shapes. Again, patches of tinted latex skin cast in various texture plaster molds I've made over the years are used to cover up the puppet body. Here's the finished skin patching job. I used my Iwata airbrush to create a subtle mottling on the wings, but I then simply painted on the acrylic airbrush paints with a small brush. I'm almost done with the puppet, but it's supposed to be black-furred, remember? This fur is actually brown and comes from an old lady's hat bought at a thrift store. I cut strips of the fur and painted it black with the acrylic airbrush paints. This also created a stability in the hairs and made them keep their shape. Tufts of hair are attached using Prosaide prosthetic glue. The teeth are blobs of melted Friendly Plastic simply rolled between my fingers into pointy elongated shapes. Flexible super glue is used to attach the teeth into the gums of the latex head. Glossy Accents scrapbooking plastic is smeared around the mouth and in the nostrils to create shiny, moist areas. The finished Byahkee is ready to be animated. To keep it aloft while it's flying I'm attaching it to a flying rig from Animation Toolkit using a wing nut at the rear end of the puppet. Hopefully, the finished scenes in the film will look something like this. This image is a Photoshop mash-up, with an image of the film's actor Samuel Lange riding the Byakhee as they head for Carcosa on cosmic winds.
A book review of Little Crocheted Monsters: 12 Mini Mutants to Make by Lan-Anh Bui and Josephine Wan with the excerpted crochet pattern for the Hogaraga amigurumi monster.
Create silly monsters and get lots of giggles with this fun headband monster craft for kids.
Just in time to delight your Halloween goblins and ghouls, we have a new Project Pattern: Make A Monster. You'll find all the monster parts you need to create a dozen or more little monster characters. Once they are designed, cut them out or print and cut them to make layout and card embellishments. These would make some pretty cute Halloween party invitations and decorations as well. For an introduction to our Project Patterns concept and instructions on using the files, please visit last month's Project Pattern release.
When can we date the narrator? They're so sassy and I love them (and this game, this game is amazing. Thank you for bringing it into being). He’s waiting for you on the DLC. Don’t make him...
Baby monster amigurumi is the cutest purple monster ever. This is the gift for Halloween or whatever occasion you want. Please note: NO PHYSICAL PRODUCT. ONLY PDF CROCHET PATTERN TO DOWNLOAD! Language: US crochet terms ***MATERIALS & TOOLS*** ✅ DK weight yarn -colors: purple, light brown, milk, sky blue, black, light purple, red The brands used in this pattern: ~Alize Lanagold classic 100g/240m ~Alize Shekerim bebe 100g/320m ~Alize Sal Abiye 100g/410m (red). ✅ Crochet hook 1.9mm ✅ Pins, scissors ✅ Tapestry needle ✅ Stuffing material, fiberfill ✅ Beads D=4mm, D=6mm, D=8mm ✅ Small charms to imitate the choker and earring ✅ Button D=15mm - 2pcs to attach arms ✅ Button D=10mm - 1pc for the waistcoat COPYRIGHT: © All rights reserved by Ekaterina Coskun MiKaDoCutes. Please, respect the time, that author spend to release the pattern. The pattern is available FOR PERSONAL USE ONLY! You are not allowed to share, reproduce, resell, publish, translate and alter the pattern in whole or part! You may sell finished products handmade by yourself from this pattern, but please, mention the author Ekaterina Coskun @mikadocutes or use #mikadocutes hashtag. MikadoLand obtains the exclusive right to sell this pattern. Visit our Instagram https://www.instagram.com/mikadocutes Is your have any questions feel free to contact us via email: MikadoCutes [at] gmail.com
Make this adorable and friendly yarn monster craft for kids for Halloween or for monster birthday party table decorations! Try it in every color and texture of yarn, use up scraps, and have fun!
Explore Radical She Tarot's 7930 photos on Flickr!
Slime Monster is an Uncommon blook, which means that you do not have it by default, and it must be unlocked through a pack. This blook is unlocked through the Medieval Pack. It has a drop rate of 13.4% chance. The Slime Monster is also an enemy and has multiple color and health variants in Tower Defense. The default TOD stats are: 14 Strength, 10 Charisma, 10 Wisdom. These stats can be buffed or debuffed by various spell cards, and are the default stats. Some of the cards that can buff or debuff