I love the look, but Randy - It reminds me of an artichoke!
Aren't reptilian/aquatic scales more rounded at the edge? Yours come to a point.
Don, I hate artichokes so that would've never crossed my mind.
The tips do have slightly rounded corners. They definitely don't come to a sharp point.
Here's a photo of the Dragon Eggs I used as reference.
Thanks, Randy
I think I see what's reinforcing that image in my head - the "flip-top" of the egg is so tiny. Not that I'm an expert (I'm most certainly not), but the few images I remember seeing of Faberge eggs had larger caps, to conceal and reveal a miniature creation that was almost half as long as the egg itself.
[pause:checkWikipedia][/pause]
OK, so now I know that there's a huge variety of Faberge eggs. Interesting note: there were 65 eggs in total, but exactly 52 were "Imperial Eggs", sold to the Tsar of Russia to give as a gift to either his wife (in the case of Alexander III) or his mother (in the case of Alexander's son, Nicholas II) - the recipient in both cases being Tsarina/Empress/Dowager Empress Maria Federovna. And they come in a freakish variety of types! Some were clocks, some held jewelry, some had miniature portraits - there was even one with a silver mechanical elephant-and-rider toy that was wound with a gold key! The remaining 13 eggs were sold to wealthy industrialists. 52 Imperial Eggs, 52 cards...
So I guess an egg like this one wouldn't exactly be out of the ordinary for a Faberge egg.