Are there any images or artwork that depict what dragonborns, kobolds, and lizardfolk would look like? What kind of clothing would they wear in D&D/Faerun? and clothing for children and adults of and age's from [children form : 2-12+] - [adults form : 18-20+]
Ps: also, Are there any image or artwork of what would a baby dragonborn, kobold and lizardfolk look like?
Yes, lots. You could get quite specific in your internet imagesearch(es) too, so "Waterdeep Dragonborn child" or "Amnish Kobold". There's a lot of leeway there, so if you're DMing you can decide that with Baldur's Gate Dragonborn it's fashionable to wear mauve this season, imagination is your limit. If you're asking as a player it'd be polite to run it by your DM in case they have specific concepts for their Forgotten Realms.
Faerun's generically based on Medieval-Renassiance Europe so you could go that path to researching outfits/attire, but there's no reason you have to stick to that. If you wanted to entirely create your own cultural look, or take elements/inspiration from other cultures, sure - why not?
There's stacks and stacks of image results for this kind of thing and we're living in a world where AI image generation's easily accessible for creating your own images. Want a Kobold in Cold-Weather clothing, easy.
I'll note, google image search is nowhere near as "good" as it used to be, I tend to use Yandex for this kind of image search and there's also plenty of fan/hobbyist/artist site such as DeviantArt, plus the already mentioned AI - although the Search features tend not to be great in my experience + I just make my own stuff. There's also the good old 3rd Edition Faerun Campaign setting that has stacks of information about specific regions and the Forgotten Realms wiki is pretty good too. You shouldn't have too much trouble finding answers, but again - it's your game, flavour it how you want.
Are there any images or artwork that depict what dragonborns, kobolds, and lizardfolk would look like? What kind of clothing would they wear in D&D/Faerun? and clothing for children and adults of and age's from [children form : 2-12+] - [adults form : 18-20+]
Ps: also, Are there any image or artwork of what would a baby dragonborn, kobold and lizardfolk look like?
Yes, lots. You could get quite specific in your internet image search(es) too, so "Waterdeep Dragonborn child" or "Amnish Kobold".
There's a lot of leeway there, so if you're DMing you can decide that with Baldur's Gate Dragonborn it's fashionable to wear mauve this season, imagination is your limit.
If you're asking as a player it'd be polite to run it by your DM in case they have specific concepts for their Forgotten Realms.
Faerun's generically based on Medieval-Renassiance Europe so you could go that path to researching outfits/attire, but there's no reason you have to stick to that. If you wanted to entirely create your own cultural look, or take elements/inspiration from other cultures, sure - why not?
There's stacks and stacks of image results for this kind of thing and we're living in a world where AI image generation's easily accessible for creating your own images. Want a Kobold in Cold-Weather clothing, easy.
I'll note, google image search is nowhere near as "good" as it used to be, I tend to use Yandex for this kind of image search and there's also plenty of fan/hobbyist/artist site such as DeviantArt, plus the already mentioned AI - although the Search features tend not to be great in my experience + I just make my own stuff. There's also the good old 3rd Edition Faerun Campaign setting that has stacks of information about specific regions and the Forgotten Realms wiki is pretty good too. You shouldn't have too much trouble finding answers, but again - it's your game, flavour it how you want.
https://wulfgold.substack.com
Blog - nerd stuff
https://deepdreamgenerator.com/u/wulfgold
A.I. art - also nerd stuff - a gallery of NPC portraits - help yourself.
Step 1: Go to Google.
Step 2: Type "Dragonborn Child" into search bar, press ENTER.
Step 3: Click Images.
Step 4: ?????
Step 5: Profit!
In all seriousness, I just did this and there are about two dozen unique images from multiple sites.