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Concavenator corcovatus with a strange crest on its backby Emily Willoughby/Stocktrek Images
35" x 23" Framed Art Frame
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Acheroraptor dromaeosaurid dinosaur with hispine beetleby Emily Willoughby/Stocktrek Images
25" x 31" Framed Art Frame
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Deinonychus protects its kill, a psittacosaurid dinosaurby Emily Willoughby/Stocktrek Images
31" x 25" Framed Art Frame
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Balaur bondoc, a strange Romanian dromaeosaurby Emily Willoughby/Stocktrek Images
29" x 27" Framed Art Frame
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Velociraptor in an autumn landscapeby Emily Willoughby/Stocktrek Images
32" x 25" Framed Art Frame
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Sciurumimus, a possible baby megalosaurid theropodby Emily Willoughby/Stocktrek Images
34" x 23" Framed Art Frame
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Saurornitholestes seeks prey in burrowsby Emily Willoughby/Stocktrek Images
41" x 29" Framed Art Frame
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Utahraptor ostrommaysorumby Emily Willoughby/Stocktrek Images
53" x 23" Framed Art Frame
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mid-sized Cretaceous China deinonychosaurby Emily Willoughby/Stocktrek Images
47" x 26" Framed Art Frame
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Microraptor gui spreads its four wings to look as large as possibleby Emily Willoughby/Stocktrek Images
37" x 32" Framed Art Frame
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deinonychosaur leaves tracks across a Cretaceous China landscapeby Emily Willoughby/Stocktrek Images
39" x 31" Framed Art Frame
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Mei long, the famous troodontid in the sleeping positionby Emily Willoughby/Stocktrek Images
42" x 28" Framed Art Frame
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bright green Velociraptor runs through a prehistoric forestby Emily Willoughby/Stocktrek Images
41" x 29" Framed Art Frame
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Pteranodon longiceps trio, two males and a femaleby Emily Willoughby/Stocktrek Images
39" x 31" Framed Art Frame
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Utahraptor ostrommaysorum, the largest known dromaeosaurby Emily Willoughby/Stocktrek Images
51" x 24" Framed Art Frame
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Eosinopteryx brevipenna perched on a tree branchby Emily Willoughby/Stocktrek Images
40" x 30" Framed Art Frame
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Deinonychus antirrhopus preys on a fishby Emily Willoughby/Stocktrek Images
43" x 28" Framed Art Frame
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Microraptor gui snacking on a cycad fruitby Emily Willoughby/Stocktrek Images
31" x 37" Framed Art Frame
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Microraptor gui eating a small fishby Emily Willoughby/Stocktrek Images
41" x 30" Framed Art Frame
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Emily Willoughby has been drawing and sketching since she first learned to pick up and firmly hold a pencil. Her childhood interest in paleontology was rekindled in the late 1990s when new feathered dinosaurs that were coming out of China were discovered. Her early “works” mostly focused on animals, especially predatory mammals, dinosaurs and birds. Despite her love of drawing, she intended all throughout her childhood to be a scientist, and she graduated in 2012from College with a Bachelor of Science degree in biology Emily has always loved birds, she also loved to learn about the connection between birds and dinosaurs, especially on their evolutionary connection. This was really fascinating to her and acted as an inspiration for her to get back into and illustrate dinosaurs. Her solid scientific background coupled with her strong passion for the arts has been a huge benefit for her when it comes to reconstructing the animals to get images that are as accurately as possible. The starting point for her reconstruction is often a skeletal diagram, if there’s none, and then she examines the original research and any published fossil photographs. From there, she also does her own research. Her first notable inspirations in paleoart while in high school were Luis Rey and Gregory Paul: She loved the bright liveliness and painstaking accuracy in their works. Framed Emily Willoughby art are mainly found in museums and art institutions. They are also found in homes and public places. Later on, she decided that pursuing paleoart as a fusion of art and science was the best way to utilize her abilities and interests.