
Well, I've learned to get over the misleading imagery of this whale design, but -- and here's where the pet peeve comes in -- I can't get over it when people make these designs even more scientifically inaccurate. For example, I was just browsing for some whale crafts, and found one that had a whale, like the one above, eating krill. I mean, come on! The whale looks most like a sperm whale, yet has no teeth, and would not intentionally be eating krill! (Sure, a sperm whale might ingest some krill while getting other food, but that's not the point.) It doesn't make sense, but I'm not going to message the person to tell them that this cute thing they've designed and put so much work into is wrong. I'm just not that kind of person. This type of inaccuracy seems to be contagious in the world of crafts, which is why scientifically correct crafts make me so happy when I see them.
Here are some of my favorite artist-designed, marine biology-related items:
Angler Fish shirt at Squidfire.com
Whale Huggers poster by Don McMichael at The Whale Museum
The "I Feel Pretty" Giant Isopod totebag at Questionable Content
Nudibranch Soft Sculpture by Weirdbuglady on Etsy
Arctic Print by SepiaLepus on Etsy
Whale Tails Shadow Puppet Set by Orangemoontoys on Etsy
Do you have any favorites?