Creepy, Crawly Tattoo Bugs

60 Temporary Tattoos That Teach

Contributors

By Artemis Roehrig

Illustrated by Jillian Ditner

Formats and Prices

Price

$7.99

Price

$11.99 CAD

Format

Trade Paperback

Format:

Trade Paperback $7.99 $11.99 CAD

This item is a preorder. Your payment method will be charged immediately, and the product is expected to ship on or around September 17, 2019. This date is subject to change due to shipping delays beyond our control.

Kids who are crazy for bugs will love sporting insect tattoos! Creepy, Crawly Tattoo Bugs features 60 frighteningly realistic temporary tattoos, from the Cobalt Blue Tarantula to the Deathstalker Scorpion, Flesh Fly, Hickory Horned Devil, and the Two-Spotted Assassin Bug, along with cool facts about each critter. Easy to apply with a damp cloth, these tattoos promise lots of frightening fun — and learning — for bug lovers!

Also available in the Tattoos That Teach series: Fluttery, Friendly Tattoo Butterflies and Other Insects;Super, Strong Tattoo Sharks; and Roaring, Rumbling Tattoo Dinosaurs.

Genre:

On Sale
Sep 17, 2019
Page Count
14 pages
Publisher
Storey
ISBN-13
9781635861969

Artemis Roehrig

About the Author

Artemis Roehrig is a children’s book coauthor and wrote the text for Super, Strong Tattoo Sharks, Roaring, Rumbling Tattoo DinosaursCreepy, Crawly Tattoo Bugs, and Fluttery, Friendly Tattoo Butterflies and Other Insects. She grew up in Western Massachusetts and spent summers on Cape Cod where she worked at the Wellfleet Bay Wildlife Sanctuary. After graduating from Skidmore College, she received her master’s degree from the Organismic and Evolutionary Biology program at the University of Massachusetts. She continues to research invasive insects in the Elkinton Lab.

Jillian Ditner combines her knowledge of science and passion for visual communication in her work as a graphic designer and scientific illustrator. She earned a graduate degree in science illustration from California State University — Monterey Bay, where she honed her observational skills and pursued interests in naturalist subjects. Ditner lives in Ithaca, New York, and works at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology as a graphics editor.
 

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