Hello, I'm Dewberry and I like Nature-inspired dragons. These are my current Gen1 tree Veilspun breeding pairs:
Abundant foliage:
Saepes
|
and
|
Frutex
|
Dragons inspired by the beauty of green trees and new brown branches.
Tight-range brown primary and tertiary, tight-range dark and muted green secondary.
Doubles possible.
Thorny path:
Spina
|
and
|
Sentis
|
Dragons inspired by all the thorny trees, bushes and plants.
Tight-range greyish brown primary, larger-range brown tertiary and a wide range of secondary colours going from the more bluish greens all the way through yellows, oranges and browns, and ending at the darker reds.
Doubles and triples possible.
Winter evergreens:
Hoopsii
(named after a
blue spruce cultivar)
Needs Flecks
|
and
|
Joppi
(named after a
pine cultivar)
Needs Flecks
|
Dragons inspired by the beautiful hues of blue and green seen on various evergreen trees and shrubs.
Tight-range brown primary, larger-range bluish green-swampy green secondary colours and a small range of white tertiary colours.
Snow-clad conifers:
Lucretia
(named after
a blue spruce cultivar)
|
and
|
Engelmann
(named after
a spruce species)
|
Same as above, these dragons take their colours from the various conifers growing all around the world - from the silvery blues to the deep greens and beyond.
Tight-range grayish brown primary, larger-range bluish green-green secondary colours and a small range of white-gray tertiary colours.
Snowy forest:
Koster
(named after
a Colorado spruce cultivar)
|
and
|
Rubens
(named after
Red spruce)
|
If wintry snowy forests could be turned into dragons, they would look something like this.
Ride-range brown primary that reaches into the reddish browns, larger-range bluish green-mossy green secondary and a small range of off-white tertiary colours.
First snow:
Acer
(Latin for maple)
|
and
|
Quercus
(Latin for oak)
|
Dragons inspired by all the colours of trees in autumn and the look of the first snow just ever so slightly covering their leaves.
Wide-range brown primary, tight-range white tertiary and a wide range of secondary colours going from the swampy greens all the way through yellows, oranges and browns, and ending at the darker reds.
Wisteria dreams:
Floribunda
(named after the
Japanese wisteria)
|
and
|
Frutescens
(named after the
American wisteria)
|
Dragons inspired by the beautiful purples of Wisterias - from the lighter hues to the darker more saturated ones.
Clay primary, tight-range purple secondary, Clay tertiary.
Pink wisteria:
Rosea
(named after
Wisteria floribunda
'Rosea')
|
and
|
Showabeni
(named after
Wisteria brachybotrys
'Showa-beni')
|
The light to the dark of the Wisteria dreams pair. This pair was created with the breath-taking sight of cascading pink wisteria blossoms in mind.
Brown-range primary, light-pink-range secondary, brown-range tertiary.
Doubles possible.
Bioluminescent forest:
Larualis
(Latin for ghostly)
|
and
|
Incorporeus
(Latin for unearthly)
|
Dragons inspired by the luminescence seen in the natural world around us. Dark, mysterious, eerie. Take a walk through these woods if you dare.
Oilslick primary, Eldritch secondary, green-range tertiary with a small chance of blueish greens or yellow.
Midnight woods:
Mysterium
(Latin for
mystery)
|
and
|
Obscurus
(Latin for
darkness)
|
As the sun sets and the world is enveloped in darkness, everything takes on a darker hue. Imagine taking a stroll through the forest at midnight with just the light of the moon guiding you. A flicker of colour here, a pale illuminated leaf here - that's the inspiration behind this pair.
Eldritch primary, Jade to Peacock secondary, blue-range to bluish-green range tertiary.
Doubles possible.
Currently available hatchlings from any of my pairs can be seen in
this tab of my Lair or in
this post in the sales thread.