#field guide
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voidbug · 1 year ago
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🦋BUTTERFLY FAIRIES OF THE WORLD🦋 I think at this point I've posted all of my butterfly fairies! I've been working on this thing forever, so I really hope you enjoy it. It's very much a love letter to scientific illustrations of animals, that I used to pour over as a kid! I made prints of this illustration as well, which you can buy on my etsy!
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crawfordpress · 9 months ago
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FIELD GUIDE TO THE FROGS OF JAPER COUNTY
This is a collection of single page gag comics about frogs in the form of a field guide. Released in the spring of 2023. 12 pages. 5.5 X 8.5 in. Blue ink on green copy paper cover. Blue ink on white copy paper for the interior pages. Risograph printed.
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cosmic-wonders-series · 1 month ago
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Solaria’s Field Guide Report: Mercury
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wizard-legs · 1 year ago
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I’ve always wanted to make a fantasy field guide because my brain chemistry was permanently altered by the kids’ media landscape of the early 2000s. I’ve also really needed to sort of get back to what I love about art lately. So, here’s a little sampler of some… field paintings I did today of some very real subjects.
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rebeccathenaturalist · 1 year ago
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I have THE biggest, BEST news EVER--
I GOT A BOOK CONTRACT!!!!!!!!
I am exceptionally pleased to announce that I have just signed a contract with Ten Speed Press (a division of Penguin Random House) to publish...
The Everyday Naturalist: How to Identify Animals, Plants, and Fungi Wherever You Go!
It is slated for publication in early Summer 2025, and will be written for anyone who wants to be able to identify the living beings around them regardless of educational level or experience. A HUGE thank you to my literary agent Jane Dystel of Dystel, Goderich & Bourret LLC, and my editor at Ten Speed Press, Julie Bennett!
This isn't just another field guide--it's a how-to book on nature identification that helps you go from "I have no idea what this animal/plant/fungus is and I don't know where to start" to "Aha! I know how to figure out what species I'm looking at/hearing!" Those familiar with my nature ID classes know that I emphasize skills and tools accessible to everyday people. Whether you're birdwatching, foraging, or just enjoying the nature around you, my goal is to help you be more confident in figuring out what living beings you encounter wherever you go--and not just in the Pacific Northwest. 
The Everyday Naturalist will not only explain what traits you need to pay attention to like color, size, shape, location, etc. and how to use them to differentiate among similar species, but will also detail how and when to use tools like apps, field guides, and more. (And given the current kerfuffle about A I generated foraging books, I will of course include information on how to determine the veracity of a given book or other resource.) And my editor and I have already been discussing some great additions to the book that will make it even more user-friendly!
Are you excited about this? I certainly am! I wanted to wait until the pixels were dry on the contract before going public with this (though my newsletter subscribers got to hear about it last month, lucky them!) It still doesn't feel real, but I'm already working on the manuscript so it'll sink in soon enough.
I will, of course, keep you all apprised of my progress because this project is going to be a big part of my life over the next several months as I write and edit and write and edit and wash, rinse, repeat. So keep your eyes on this space for updates (and feel free to add yourself to my monthly email newsletter here, too!)
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bebemoon · 2 months ago
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look for the name NOVEMBER (requested by @clownov) | jody t of california black corduroy and red plaid long-sleeved maxi dress (c. 197o's), london underground black leather wooden heel and platform boots, laura benson "temptation" earrings, fort & manlé "late harvest" eau de parfum (cherry tobacco, rosewood, cedarwood, leather, rose, vanilla), a fifth edition of mrs. william starr dana's "how to know the wild flowers: a guide to the names, haunts and habits of our common wildflower" (1894 edition)
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suzythesilkie · 8 months ago
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Mermay day one, hopefully I can keep it up for 31 day.
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checanty · 1 year ago
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I just noticed I didn't tell you yet--which is shameful as it is Tumblr where the Mermaid Scientist was born! My Mermaid Book was picked up by Eye of Newt and is available for pre-order right now (it's coming out very soon, though, so any orders should make it until Christmas if that's a concern of yours)! If you're in North America, I'd suggest ordering directly through my publisher's website, however it's available anywhere you'd usually order books. You can ask your favourite indie book shop to order it for you or--if there's no other option or you're worried about crazy shipping costs where you live--it's available via the place starting with A, which shall otherwise not be named, as well. Please note: This is an edited version of the original book. It's shorter, but with more coherent world building and a beautiful new layout and design. It's a proper field guide now!
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horizoncountdown · 5 months ago
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Beta’s Zenith Huntress outfit
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Artwork © system-threat-detected on Tumblr.
Concept is from missmrah’s artwork.
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hottdoggblogg · 1 month ago
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chipsahoyforyaboi · 7 months ago
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“This wasn't what I wanted
But sometimes that's what you get
Yeah, it's all a whirlwind
The memories are all that's left
Sometimes I can't help but wonder
Do you have a new lover yet?
It's just the cost of living
And time spent”
You Were - Field Guide
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icy-saturday · 9 days ago
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@biblicallyaccuratefour @1tzt3n10-b1gbr0 @differentsweetscreator @pibfb @dr-fizzovich @annabunnyisback @profily-and-friends @samuniverse108 @fourteenintegerfan @oneirophobes-nightmare @dimmydoodles @slime-water-shrew @willow-hart727
Merry early Christmas :)
Eat up moots 🪺🪺🪺🪺
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dbielski · 7 months ago
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Some days, I choose to be an adventurer.
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corvidsofthedeep · 5 months ago
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from the deep #24023: blue jay illustrations by Arthur Singer for A Guide to Field Identification: Birds of North America by Chandler S. Robbins, Bertel Bruun, and Herbert S. Zim.
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studiolemonboy · 7 months ago
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Mutants of Cherry Creek (pt 2)
Some MORE mutated critters from my YA lovecraftian horror comic set in 90s New England.
Mutagenic ooze is seeping into the town of Cherry Creek and mutating normal New England wildlife into terrifying monsters. The Cherry Creek Middle School Paranormal Investigation Club sets out to discover, catalogue, and tame all of the mutated cryptids and hopefully find the source of the toxic ooze before it permanently infects everything (and everyone) in town.
Northern Short Tailed Shrew — one of only a few venomous mammals
Brown and Black Bears - walk on two legs, climb trees, intelligent
Eastern Crayfish - present in the fossil record for at least 300 million years Eastern
Moose - huge but stealthy
Eastern Newt (Red Eft) — can secrete a strong smelling chemical from glands in its skin
At first, the animals just seem weird, strange, a little “off”. Over time, exposure to the ooze causes these creatures to get bigger, meaner, and much more dangerous. (all the beginning stage creatures shown here are newly mutated, their final stages are after only a few weeks of exposure)
I also love folklore and cryptids and I really love the idea of this club of dorky middle school cryptid hunters assigning names like “bigfoot”, “mothman”, and “hodag” to these monsters so can try and contextualize something they don’t really understand. Soon the club realizes these aren’t fun isolated critters but symptoms much larger impending ecological disaster!
I picture it like pokemon evolution, going from a cute water turtle to a kaiju which is a lot for a ten year old to handle.
Which is your favorite? What cryptid would you wanna see? What animal should I “Cryptify” next? lmk what you think!
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littlealienproducts · 9 months ago
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Vintage 1970s World of Fish Reference Book by TheThriftyFoxShop
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