I do not agree with the other people answering this question. Both of these constructions are unusual. I wouldn't use them myself. But I do not think they are incorrect. They might be old-fashioned.
A search in Google Books finds these examples from famous authors:
"...it is not very wonderful that, with all their promising talents and early information, they should be entirely deficient in the less common acquirements of self-knowledge, generosity and humility..."--Jane Austen, "Mansfield Park"
"...fishing for the curious inhabitants of the deep,—all of which, although the sailors thought little of them, were strange, and interesting, and very wonderful to me."--R. M. Ballantyne, "The Coral Island"
"This growth and dying and reproduction of living things leads to some very wonderful consequences..."--H. G. Wells, "The Outline of History"
"Mr. Whistler, whose wonderful and eccentric genius is better appreciated in France than in England, sends a very wonderful picture entitled The Golden Girl..."--Oscar Wilde, "Miscellanies"
"The lady, however, did not prove so very terrible."--Charles Reade, "A Terrible Temptation"
"This was a very terrible and melancholy thing to see..."--Daniel Defoe, "A Journal of the Plague Year"
"He was very terrible to look upon."--Oscar Wilde, "Salomé"
"This was a very terrible thing to poor travellers, as you may suppose..."--Nathaniel Hawthorne