mashupmenagerie.blogspot.com
Mashup Menagerie: Barracougar
http://mashupmenagerie.blogspot.com/2012/05/haunting-oceans-of-canada-and-yukon.html
A smaller but significant percentage of submarine attacks fail when its victim zooms away, unencumbered by the drag of fur, front-facing funnel-like ears and a large pair of hind legs that can’t bend upwards and are therefore useless for swimming. Illustration by the author, Alan C. Jones. Two dorsal fins poke out of the dark grey fur atop the barracougar’s long, compressed body, helping avoid rolling and assisting in turning. The fur gives way to silver scales, which in turn are covered by mor...
mashupmenagerie.blogspot.com
Mashup Menagerie: Herrong
http://mashupmenagerie.blogspot.com/2012/06/herrong.html
Herrong illustration by Helen Parrish. Thanks for your comment! Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). Mashup Menagerie is a blog written and illustrated by Alan C. Jones! View my complete profile. There was an error in this gadget.
mashupmenagerie.blogspot.com
Mashup Menagerie: March 2013
http://mashupmenagerie.blogspot.com/2013_03_01_archive.html
I'm taking a break from Mashup Menagerie for a while. I'm mostly concentrating on Glides at the moment, my music project, which you can hear at http:/ glides.bandcamp.com. I've got loads of Mashup Menagerie entries written but it takes weeks to illustrate each one, so when I'm in the mood to do more work on illustrations, I'll be posting some more. Subscribe to: Posts (Atom). Mashup Menagerie is a blog written and illustrated by Alan C. Jones! View my complete profile. There was an error in this gadget.
mashupmenagerie.blogspot.com
Mashup Menagerie: 7 Ways we can Learn from Snails, Whales and Snwhales
http://mashupmenagerie.blogspot.com/2012/09/7-ways-we-can-learn-from-snails-whales.html
7 Ways we can Learn from Snails, Whales and Snwhales. In today’s world, where everyone’s rushing around like headless crickens, not even pausing to rub their knees together to make strange chirruping sounds, it’s often necessary to stop, take a breath and have a good look around you to see how many other idiots have stopped moving and are standing right in your way, motionlessly gawping like a pike and preventing you from getting on the Northern Line. That’s right. Snails. Even if you had been able to se...
mashupmenagerie.blogspot.com
Mashup Menagerie: Taking a break
http://mashupmenagerie.blogspot.com/2013/03/taking-break.html
I'm taking a break from Mashup Menagerie for a while. I'm mostly concentrating on Glides at the moment, my music project, which you can hear at http:/ glides.bandcamp.com. I've got loads of Mashup Menagerie entries written but it takes weeks to illustrate each one, so when I'm in the mood to do more work on illustrations, I'll be posting some more. Thanks for your comment! Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). Mashup Menagerie is a blog written and illustrated by Alan C. Jones! View my complete profile.
mashupmenagerie.blogspot.com
Mashup Menagerie: May 2012
http://mashupmenagerie.blogspot.com/2012_05_01_archive.html
A smaller but significant percentage of submarine attacks fail when its victim zooms away, unencumbered by the drag of fur, front-facing funnel-like ears and a large pair of hind legs that can’t bend upwards and are therefore useless for swimming. Illustration by the author, Alan C. Jones. Two dorsal fins poke out of the dark grey fur atop the barracougar’s long, compressed body, helping avoid rolling and assisting in turning. The fur gives way to silver scales, which in turn are covered by mor...Alive, ...
mashupmenagerie.blogspot.com
Mashup Menagerie: September 2012
http://mashupmenagerie.blogspot.com/2012_09_01_archive.html
7 Ways we can Learn from Snails, Whales and Snwhales. In today’s world, where everyone’s rushing around like headless crickens, not even pausing to rub their knees together to make strange chirruping sounds, it’s often necessary to stop, take a breath and have a good look around you to see how many other idiots have stopped moving and are standing right in your way, motionlessly gawping like a pike and preventing you from getting on the Northern Line. That’s right. Snails. Even if you had been able to se...
mashupmenagerie.blogspot.com
Mashup Menagerie: Crabbit
http://mashupmenagerie.blogspot.com/2012/07/crabbit.html
Crabbit illustration by the author, Alan C. Jones. Dividing its time between the sea, the beach and the meadow, the Crabbit happily digs its warren in sand, silt or soil. Its large claws make short work of tunnelling, and its thick exoskeleton protects it against tunnel collapse, although not against predators, as, thanks to its mammacean heritage, said exoskeleton leaves its eyes, paws, long floppy ears, twitchy little nose and powder-puff tail exposed. Leaving poorly-hidden chopped-up chocolate eggs.
mashupmenagerie.blogspot.com
Mashup Menagerie: March 2012
http://mashupmenagerie.blogspot.com/2012_03_01_archive.html
Illustration by Tim Will. Sadly for the chihuaardvark, it was domesticated many decades ago and is now often dyed pink and dragged round shopping malls by women with more money than sense but enough sense not to own. A baboodle. The one advantage for the chihuaardvark is that, while it might suddenly find itself deprived of its personalised cucumber, it just as suddenly gains access to a ready supply of woolly jumpers, which goes some small way towards stopping it trembling all the time.
mashupmenagerie.blogspot.com
Mashup Menagerie: June 2012
http://mashupmenagerie.blogspot.com/2012_06_01_archive.html
Possibly the least popular animal on the planet, the wastrich is a truly hideous beast. Bright yellow and standing up to 9 feet tall, with its wide, triangular head atop its long, muscular neck, the wastrich makes an imposing figure. Its striped exoskeleton rather unnecessarily alerts potential predators to its sour taste, though why it thinks anything would consider trying to eat it remains a mystery. Wastrich illustration by the author, Alan C. Jones. Herrong illustration by Helen Parrish.