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Blog: Creative Whimsies (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: children's book illustration, kids, middle grade, mummy, Add a tag
Blog: A Mouse in the House (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: children's illustration, Texas, holiday, digital art, roberta baird, artwork, a mouse in the house, children's book art, mummy, www.robertabaird.com, Books, illustration, Holidays, Halloween, Add a tag
Miranda Mummy groaned in despair…
“When I open my coffin, I’ve nothing to wear!”
Then she looked in her mirror and said with a pause….
“Does my bottom look bigger when wrapped up in gauze?”
Her very best ghoul friend knew just the right trick.
“I’ll pull on this string and you’ll soon look less thick….”
……. OOPS!
~by Roberta Baird
Blog: Perpetually Adolescent (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: illustrator, Book News, Picture Books, Christmas, Author Interviews, Mother's Day, Mummy, Scholastic Australia, Kim Fleming, Cherish Your Skin, Book Reviews - Childrens and Young Adult, Laine Mitchell, You're Special To Me, Romi Sharp, Surprise!, Add a tag
Kim Fleming knows how to tell a great story. She tells stories through pictures. Kim’s art creates a sense of affection, warmth and joy. Born in Canada, this now Melbournite has found her calling in illustrating children’s books. She has previously illustrated such picture books as the gorgeous True Blue Santa written by Anne Mangan, […]
Add a CommentBlog: Illustration for Kids Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Illustration, cartoon, comic, ghost, trick or treat, paula j. becker, paula becker, Frankenstein, devil, haunted house, mummy, #halloween, #hauntedhouse, #paulajbecker, #trickortreat, children's illustraton, Add a tag
Blog: Whateverings (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Links, halloween, kids, cute, cartoon, comic, General Illustration, children's illustration, Samples, witch, vampire, ghost, funny, pumpkin, trick or treat, paula j. becker, dracula, paula becker, black cat, bats, spider, frankenstein, werewolf, haunted house, mummy, Cartoons & Comics, graveyard, Add a tag
It’s been a while since I updated! Time to do so, and I’ll begin with a Halloween piece I worked on recently. The main piece and closeups are below. I can always add and tweak, but there is a time to call an illustration “Done!” Happy Halloween, everyone!
Blog: A Mouse in the House (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: illustration, Holidays, Halloween, children's illustration, Texas, holiday, digital art, roberta baird, artwork, houston, a mouse in the house, mummy, www.robertabaird.com, Add a tag
Blog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: *Featured, Science & Medicine, Health & Medicine, Arts & Leisure, radiology, The History of Radiology, Books, History, exhibition, Egyptology, ancient egypt, mummy, british museum, Add a tag
Egyptian mummies continue to fascinate us due to the remarkable insights they provide into ancient civilizations. Flinders Petrie, the first UK chair in Egyptology did not have the luxury of X-ray techniques in his era of archaeological analysis in the late nineteenth century. However, twentieth century Egyptologists have benefited from Roentgen’s legacy. Sir Graham Elliott Smith along with Howard Carter did early work on plain x-ray analysis of mummies when they X-rayed the mummy Tuthmosis in 1904. Numerous X-ray analyses were performed using portable X-ray equipment on mummies in the Cairo Museum.
Since then, many studies have been done worldwide, especially with the development of more sophisticated imaging techniques such as CT scanning, invented by Hounsfield in the UK in the 1970s. With this, it became easier to visualize the interiors of mummies, thus revealing their hidden mysteries under their linen wrapped bodies and the elaborate face masks which had perplexed researchers for centuries. Harwood Nash performed one of the earliest head scans of a mummy in Canada in 1977 and Isherwood’s team along with Professor David also performed some of the earliest scannings of mummies in Manchester.
A fascinating new summer exhibition at the British Museum has recently opened, and consists of eight mummies, all from different periods and Egyptian dynasties, that have been studied with the latest dual energy CT scanners. These scanners have 3D volumetric image acquisitions that reveal the internal secrets of these mummies. Mummies of babies and young children are included, as well as adults. There have been some interesting discoveries already, for example, that dental abscesses were prevalent as well as calcified plaques in peripheral arteries, suggesting vascular disease was present in the population who lived over 3,000 years ago. More detailed analysis of bones, including the pelvis, has been made possible by the scanned images, enabling more accurate estimation of the age of death.
Although embalmers took their craft seriously, mistakes did occur, as evidenced by one of the mummy exhibits, which shows Padiamenet’s head detached from the body during the process, the head was subsequently stabilized by metal rods. Padiamenet was a temple doorkeeper who died around 700BC. Mummies had their brains removed with the heart preserved as this was considered the seat of the soul. Internal organs such as the stomach and liver were often removed; bodies were also buried with a range of amulets.
The exhibit provides a fascinating introduction to mummies and early Egyptian life more than 3,000 years ago and includes new insights gleaned from cutting edge twenty first century imaging technology.
Ancient Lives: New Discoveries is on at the British Museum until the 30 November 2014.
Heading image: Mummy. Public domain via Pixabay.
The post Radiology and Egyptology: insights from ancient lives at the British Museum appeared first on OUPblog.
Blog: A Mouse in the House (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: illustration, Halloween, children's illustration, Texas, holiday, digital art, roberta baird, artwork, houston, a mouse in the house, children's book art, mummy, www.robertabaird.com, Add a tag
Miranda Mummy groaned in despair…
“When I open my coffin, I’ve nothing to wear!”
Then she looked in her mirror and said with a pause….
“Does my bottom look bigger when wrapped up in gauze?”
Her very best ghoul friend knew just the right trick.
“I’ll pull on this string and you’ll soon look less thick….”
……. OOPS!
~by Roberta Baird
Blog: A Mouse in the House (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: illustration, Holidays, Halloween, children's illustration, holiday, digital art, roberta baird, artwork, houston, a mouse in the house, Ghoulies Roberta Baird, children's book art, mummy, www.robertabaird.com, Add a tag
Miranda Mummy groaned in despair…
“When I open my coffin, I’ve nothing to wear!”
Then she looked in her mirror and said with a pause….
“Does my bottom look bigger when wrapped up in gauze?”
Her very best ghoul friend knew just the right trick.
“I’ll pull on this string and you’ll soon look less thick….”
……. OOPS!
By
Roberta Baird
Blog: Whateverings (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Links, halloween, comics, cartoon, General Illustration, card, frankenstein, mummy, Cartoons & Comics, wolfman, Add a tag
Posting some cartoons (that I’ve always liked) from a Halloween greeting card I did a few years back…
Blog: A Mouse in the House (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: illustration, Halloween, Uncategorized, children's illustration, holiday, digital art, roberta baird, calendar, artwork, houston, a mouse in the house, Ghoulies Roberta Baird, paper toys, mummy, www.robertabaird.com, Add a tag
Keep your mummy on your desktop… click on the image for full size, right click and save!
Happy October!
Blog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Education, World, Anthropology, This Day in History, Europe, caption, mummy, shoulder, *Featured, higher education, Images & Slideshows, Classics & Archaeology, alps, otzi, this day in world history, mummified, attachment_18424, Ötzi’s, arrowhead, Add a tag
This Day in World History - While hiking through the Alps on the Italian-Austrian border, Erika and Helmut Simon, a German couple, spotted a brown shape in a watery gully below them. Scrambling down to investigate, they realized that they were looking at a human head and shoulder. Assuming the body was a climber who had been killed in a fall, they reported their find to authorities. The body was removed with a jackhammer and tourists made off with some of its clothing and the tools that were found with it.
Blog: Creative Whimsies (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Halloween, mummy, sketchbook project, Add a tag
Blog: Creative Whimsies (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: mummy, sketchbook project, Halloween, sketch, Add a tag
Blog: Creative Whimsies (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: children's book, pattern, licensing, Licensed Art, cat, mummy, iced tea, hot tea, Illustration, boy, Add a tag
Blog: A Mouse in the House (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: digital art, roberta baird, artwork, a mouse in the house, Ghoulies Roberta Baird, mummy, www.robertabaird.com, dueling banjo pigs, illustration, children's illustration, Add a tag
Blog: Watercolor Wednesdays (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: mummy, sruble, stephanie ruble, Halloween, dog, Add a tag
I decided to do a favorite character that I like to draw. I love drawing simple ghosts like these from last week, but for this prompt I decided to do a mummy, which is also fun. This is a more traditional mummy than the ones I usually do, so I played with texture in the background and added the little dog.
Looks great! Gorgeous shadows and is that a crumpled paper bag texture? You're so talented. :)
Laura...this is just wonderful. I love to use textures and patterns in my illustrations. You did a great job on this!
I love your white colors in the bandages... absolutely FAB! The crumpled background is really nice too. Good job!