Perry the Pterodactyl loves gliding on the morning breeze. He stretches his wings and swoops gently past the clouds. Make his high-flying adventure come alive with color!
Perry the pterodactyl is stretching wide wings and gliding gently through the morning air. Fluffy clouds drift nearby as he swoops along on the breeze. His flying pose gives you lots of room to try bold wing colors or soft sky shades. Imagine looking down from Perryβs high view: would he see forests, rivers, mountains, or other dinosaurs far below the clouds?
Color Perryβs wings rusty orange, deep blue, or even purple with darker lines along the wing fingers. His body could be sandy brown, gray, or green, with a light cream belly. Make the clouds bright white, then shade their bottoms light gray or pale blue. A clear blue sky is classic, but sunrise colors like pink, peach, and yellow can make Perryβs morning flight look extra special.
Pterodactyls were flying reptiles, not dinosaurs. Their wings were made from skin stretched along a very long finger on each front limb. They lived millions of years ago, at the same time as many dinosaurs. The word βpterodactylβ is often used for several kinds of flying reptiles, though Pterodactylus was one specific kind. Like birds today, these animals used wings to travel through the air.