Planning a sweet shindig in the hoppin city of Cheyenne? Keep your friends entertained with a caricature artist!
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You've noticed those caricature artists and cartoonists at Disney World and Six Flags - but now you want to hire one for your very own Cheyenne party or event. Are you hosting a children's party and want a Cheyenne caricature artist to make funny pictures of your family? Caricature and cartoon artists in Cheyenne, WY can provide great fun to your party and also provide you with goofy pictures that your guests and you can hang up in your homes and laugh about. The drawings these caricaturists create can make cool conversation pieces for you and your guests. Kids and adults both really love these drawings at parties! If you're looking for caricaturists and cartoon artists in Cheyenne, we've got tons listed in our directory!
Cheyenne Caricatures may also serve the following areas: Fe Warren AFB, Nunn, Pine Bluffs, Albin, Hereford, Hillsdale, Ault, Livermore, Pierce, Laporte, Chugwater, Meriden, Horse Creek, Carpenter, Granite Canon, Buford, Fort Collins, Grover, Carr, Wellington, Burns, Tie Siding, and Laramie County.
Cheyenne Factoid:
The earliest known official record of the Cheyenne comes from the mid-seventeenth century, when a group of Cheyenne visited Fort Crevecoeur, near present-day Chicago. During the 17th and 18th centuries, the Cheyenne moved from the Great Lakes region to present day Minnesota and North Dakota and established villages. The most prominent of these ancient villages is Biesterfeldt Village, in eastern North Dakota along the Sheyenne River. The Cheyenne also came into contact with the neighboring Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara nations and adopted many of their cultural characteristics. In 1804, the Lewis and Clark visited a Cheyenne village in North Dakota. Pressure from migrating Lakota and Ojibwa nations was forcing the Cheyenne west. By the mid 19th century, the Cheyenne had largely abandoned their sedentary, agricultural and pottery traditions and fully adopted the classic nomadic Plains culture. Tipis replaced earth lodges, and the diet switched from fish and agricultural produce to mainly bison and wild fruits and vegetables. During this time, the Cheyenne also moved into Wyoming, Colorado and South Dakota.  Cheyenne Caricatures