Rangi

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This chameleon was named Rangi because he is full of color. The word Rangi in Swahili means color, dye, or pigment. Rangi was created about a year ago while I sat in the living room with my Mum and Bibi (Swahili for Grandmother or Lady) visiting from New Zealand. He was made for a wonderful little boy who is very dear to my heart. I believe he is the very definition of feel good art and he is truly made with love.

Rangi was born in November 2019 and created in pencil, ink, and colored in Copic markers. This fine-art print is 5x5 inches and on 100% cotton, true baryta (barium sulfate) fiber paper that offers the density of a traditional darkroom FB-type paper to hold detail in the deep blacks of the shadow regions, while producing natural white highlights that’s enhanced with a slight fiber glossy surface texture.

Why are chameleons so awesome? “A chameleon sits motionlessly on a tree branch. Suddenly its sticky, two-foot-long tongue snaps out at 13 miles an hour, wrapping around a cricket and whipping the yummy snack back into the reptile’s mouth. Now that’s fast food dining! And the chameleon’s swift eating style is just one of its many features that’ll leave you tongue-tied.” - Read more! kids.nationalgeographic.com

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This chameleon was named Rangi because he is full of color. The word Rangi in Swahili means color, dye, or pigment. Rangi was created about a year ago while I sat in the living room with my Mum and Bibi (Swahili for Grandmother or Lady) visiting from New Zealand. He was made for a wonderful little boy who is very dear to my heart. I believe he is the very definition of feel good art and he is truly made with love.

Rangi was born in November 2019 and created in pencil, ink, and colored in Copic markers. This fine-art print is 5x5 inches and on 100% cotton, true baryta (barium sulfate) fiber paper that offers the density of a traditional darkroom FB-type paper to hold detail in the deep blacks of the shadow regions, while producing natural white highlights that’s enhanced with a slight fiber glossy surface texture.

Why are chameleons so awesome? “A chameleon sits motionlessly on a tree branch. Suddenly its sticky, two-foot-long tongue snaps out at 13 miles an hour, wrapping around a cricket and whipping the yummy snack back into the reptile’s mouth. Now that’s fast food dining! And the chameleon’s swift eating style is just one of its many features that’ll leave you tongue-tied.” - Read more! kids.nationalgeographic.com

This chameleon was named Rangi because he is full of color. The word Rangi in Swahili means color, dye, or pigment. Rangi was created about a year ago while I sat in the living room with my Mum and Bibi (Swahili for Grandmother or Lady) visiting from New Zealand. He was made for a wonderful little boy who is very dear to my heart. I believe he is the very definition of feel good art and he is truly made with love.

Rangi was born in November 2019 and created in pencil, ink, and colored in Copic markers. This fine-art print is 5x5 inches and on 100% cotton, true baryta (barium sulfate) fiber paper that offers the density of a traditional darkroom FB-type paper to hold detail in the deep blacks of the shadow regions, while producing natural white highlights that’s enhanced with a slight fiber glossy surface texture.

Why are chameleons so awesome? “A chameleon sits motionlessly on a tree branch. Suddenly its sticky, two-foot-long tongue snaps out at 13 miles an hour, wrapping around a cricket and whipping the yummy snack back into the reptile’s mouth. Now that’s fast food dining! And the chameleon’s swift eating style is just one of its many features that’ll leave you tongue-tied.” - Read more! kids.nationalgeographic.com