Editing File:Skyeel.jpg

Jump to navigation Jump to search

Warning: You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you log in or create an account, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.

The edit can be undone. Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then save the changes below to finish undoing the edit.

Latest revision Your text
Line 8: Line 8:
 
|type={{cat tag|Interior art}} - {{tag|Shallan's sketchbook}}, {{cat tag|lifeforms}}
 
|type={{cat tag|Interior art}} - {{tag|Shallan's sketchbook}}, {{cat tag|lifeforms}}
 
|official=y
 
|official=y
|alt=This picture is a study of sky eels: some rough sketches of how they move and more detailed drawings of specific body parts. It is annotated in a neat, curly handwriting, presumably Shallan's.
 
This picture has several sketches of sky eels on it. Some are simple line drawings of sky eels in various poses, others are more detailed. The top left of the page has a sky eel's head poking in. The neck is simply a pair of lines but the head itself is very detailed. It looks like a real-life moray eel, with a pronounced forehead, a snout and a sack-like gullet. The mouth is partially open showing rows of sharp teeth. It has an impressive under-bite.
 
To the right of that picture is a much simpler drawing showing a sky eel in flight, viewed from the side. The creature moves in an elegant S shape. This picture also shows off the impressive, serrated crest running along the creature's back and sides. These crests and fin-like structures vaguely resemble the fins of real-life manta rays, but much smaller. They give the sky eel an airy, billowing appearance.
 
The centre of the page is filled with the largest and most detailed sky eel, flying across the page from right to left. This is probably the last one Shallan drew, using the smaller sketches as preparation for this one. The head, posture and fins are clearly taken from the two pictures above it. Its head is angled down, scanning for prey, and it is accompanied by a swarm of 24 luck spren. They are small, narrow rectangles, flying in formation with the sky eel. Alongside their predatory companion, the luck spren almost resemble fangs or claws, ready to strike.
 
Below this picture is another smaller one focusing on how sky eels move. This one is making a right turn.
 
To the right of the previous picture is another larger, more detailed one. It's a sky eel coiled up like a snake, hissing at the viewer, teeth bared. This shows that, like real-life moray eels, sky eels have two sets of jaws. The normal jaws, you'd expect, a second set deeper in their mouth, also lined with teeth. Lacking hands, moray eels can project these jaws forwards to grab prey and drag them into their mouths. I assume sky eels do something similar.
 
At the bottom of the page is a set of three smaller drawings showing how sky eels hunt. The first picture shows a scene from the docks: a barrel, a rat and a sky eel. The barrel is a typical wooden barrel, planks held together by riveted metal bands. A thick length of rope lies coiled at the foot of the barrel. An unsuspecting rat scurries from right to left, unaware of the danger. Above the rat, a sky eel is diving vertically down, jaws wide open. comparing it to the size of the barrel and the rat it's as long as a small cat. In the next drawing the sky eel has its jaws locked on the rat's neck. The sky eel's body is wrapped around the rat like a constrictor snake as the two wrestle for control. In the final picture the sky eel has killed the rat. It has the unfortunate rodent in its jaws and appears to be slithering away from the viewer instead of flying. Perhaps the rat is too heavy for it to fly with.
 
 
}}
 
}}
   

Please note that all contributions to The Coppermind are considered to be released under the CC4 by-nc-nd (see Coppermind:Copyrights for details). If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly and redistributed at will, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource. Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!

To protect the wiki against automated edit spam, we kindly ask you to solve the following CAPTCHA:

Cancel Editing help (opens in new window)