For artists and collectors sponsored by Intercal...your mohair supplier and Johnna's Mohair Store
I'd like to introduce you all to my latest creation Bandit the Numbat (otherwise known as the Banded Anteater). This little chap is a marsupial native to Australia that eats termites, termites and more termites, approximately 20,000 of them per day to be exact! Sadly they are an endangered species now due to predation by foxes and feral cats etc.
He measures approximately 7" from nose to bottom (his tail is another 6" long) and stands about 4" high. I created him out of all white fabrics and airbrushed on his fur markings. I do hope that you like him.
Regards
Lisa
wonderful, amazing, beautiful
Wow!!!! Absolutely amazing. Beautiful.
~ Kathy
Oh My Gosh! He is UNBELIEVABLY fantastic!
WOW Lisa!! He is Amazing it's hard to believe he's not the real thing.. Blown away :0)
Lisa, he's incredible! You are too good to be true! Stunning job!
Lisa, he is truly stunning! I am sure you must be rightly proud of this outstanding work - brilliant!!! (Oggie wants one!
Hugs, Ruth
all your work is amazing. Realistic, artistic perfection!
i love all your work
and every time again you just stun me again
absolute increadable this animal
specially when you sayed HOW small it is !!!
He is absolutely stunning and amazing and gorgeous and and and just everything lol!!!
I have seen one of these at a Fauna Park not far from our studio and this little fellow really does look like the real thing. In local souvenir shops I have seen mass-produced soft toy numbats and they have spots as if they are meant to be quolls and yet their tag reads "numbat?" I am so impressed with this numbat he looks like the real thing and is sooooo spectacular!! Well done!
Wow, amazing work again, you would think he was real!! Fantastic.
Hugs
Pauline
He is absolutely amazing!
Thank you for all the wonderful comments. He's off to Australia soon so he'll be going home.
Love it What an amazing job Lisa.
superb! that's amazing, love the markings and your air brush detail...
Thank you so much Lynn and Susana.
Regards
Lisa
Stunning work, Lisa. Wow!