with Spoonflower's new print technology.
We love searching for colorful nudibranchs on our dives! These are the ones we most commonly see here in Hawaii.
Nudibranch species and max sizes include: pustulose (Phyllidia pustulosa, 51 mm), sphinx (Phyllidiopsis sphingis, 23 mm), fried egg (Phyllidia varicosa, 102 mm), red-spotted (Goniobranchus sp, 50 mm), Danielle's (Thorunna daniellae, 25mm), white-margin (Glossodoris rufomarginatus, 50 mm) and eggs, Spanish dancer (Hexabranchus aureomarginatus, 200 mm), blue dragon (Pteraeolidia semperi, 216 mm), kahuna (Thorunna kahuna, 30 mm body), gloomy (Tamgja morosa, 121 mm), and Tom Smith's (Alreadoris tomsmithi, 27 mm). Also included in this print are two common flatworm species: divided (Pseudobiceros cf. dimidiatus, 60 mm) and fushia (Pseudoceros ferrunineus, 50 mm); and one common Pleurobranch species: gum drop (Berthellina delicata, 57 mm) that we commonly see on the reef. I initially intended to make the illustrations true to their relative sizes, but the smallest ones would have been lost in the repeat pattern, so I took artistic liberty and made them a bit larger.
425 dpi
background: 051928
sponge: 38454F
with Spoonflower's new print technology.
We love searching for colorful nudibranchs on our dives! These are the ones we most commonly see here in Hawaii.
Nudibranch species and max sizes include: pustulose (Phyllidia pustulosa, 51 mm), sphinx (Phyllidiopsis sphingis, 23 mm), fried egg (Phyllidia varicosa, 102 mm), red-spotted (Goniobranchus sp, 50 mm), Danielle's (Thorunna daniellae, 25mm), white-margin (Glossodoris rufomarginatus, 50 mm) and eggs, Spanish dancer (Hexabranchus aureomarginatus, 200 mm), blue dragon (Pteraeolidia semperi, 216 mm), kahuna (Thorunna kahuna, 30 mm body), gloomy (Tamgja morosa, 121 mm), and Tom Smith's (Alreadoris tomsmithi, 27 mm). Also included in this print are two common flatworm species: divided (Pseudobiceros cf. dimidiatus, 60 mm) and fushia (Pseudoceros ferrunineus, 50 mm); and one common Pleurobranch species: gum drop (Berthellina delicata, 57 mm) that we commonly see on the reef. I initially intended to make the illustrations true to their relative sizes, but the smallest ones would have been lost in the repeat pattern, so I took artistic liberty and made them a bit larger.
425 dpi
background: 051928
sponge: 38454F