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We were camping next to a beautiful meadow, and I took my camera to go sit in it for a bit, waiting for the sun to drop below the horizon. When I went to shoot the sunset, my 400mm decided to focus on this spider building a web! This was nothing my eye could ever have seen. It was so beautifully backlit, made iridescent from the perfect light of the sunset.
Photo taken May 6, 2021
The most common species of spiders in lawns is the Agelenopsis spp. It is also called the grass spider. Other types such as the hobo and wolf spiders may also be present in your lawn.
The Flickr Lounge - all together
My grandson is a web designer and needed some fruity photos, which just happen to fit this week's theme.
Did you know that this species adds tufts of extra silk to their web to alert birds from flying into them? Nature's so amazing!
This wasn't the shot I was thinking of but when I opened the curtains this week it was a little foggy and the spider webs were highlighted. Had trouble taking them from the window without greenery across them. Some of the webs were a little untidy (probably still effective) maybe those were by trainee web designer spiders
My desk is in the corner next to the red chair. You can tell that this is the "web designer's" desk as it's the only computer in the office that's a PC and not an Apple Mac.
Portland, Maine
January 2007
Members of the Web Designer's Coffee Klatch meeting at the apartment of one of the members.
Kodak BW400CN film / unsure of what film camera, but possibly an Olympus XA or Stylus Epic.
More work from my website and a fair bit of of work involved in just 1 page...another huge learning curve but I've been checking out some of the better designers and having a look at what their doing!
Work in progress...I'll be changing some of the photo's in the gallery...
kinda appreciate why web designers charge what they do now!
Another Macro shot using the 10X lens. I think the most interesting feature of usng it instead of taking a regular close up ,& then cropping in, is the bokeh you get.
© Harshith JV
Common names: Spiny Orb Weaver
Scientific name: Gasteracantha geminata
Place: Mangalore, Karnataka
Date: November 22, 2019
File name: IMG_0243.upload.JPG
This big guy (Orb Weaver Spider) was rebuilding his web just outside my back door in this capture.
Be kind to spiders, they are our bug control specialists! Contrary to your possible arachnophobia, they are 99% harmless to Humans.
Joel Delane is a web designer from London. I am available for free-lance and contract work in web-design, graphics, corporate identity and DVD creation.
George Probst is used to being called crazy. The web designer from Blacksburg, VA, USA, shocks most people when he tells them that he swims with sharks. But after many thrilling dives and hundreds of up-close and personal photographs, he hopes others will see these mysterious underwater giants in a whole new light.
Explore his story on the Flickr Blog and visit George Probst's photostream.
A submission to Sliders Sunday, where over-processing is encouraged. A backlit spider enjoying a bit of photoshopping.
Contre-jour on the metal railings of Pittville Park on Pittville Lawn, Cheltenham on a bright autumn morning.
It’s ironic to think a fly created so much buzz online, but that’s exactly what happened. When Belgian web designer Nicholas Hendrickx posted his "The Adventures of Mr. Fly" series on Flickr, hundreds of thousands of people clicked on his photostream just to see where one little bug would turn up next.
Explore his entire story on the Flickr Blog.
Argiope aurantia
The spider species Argiope aurantia is commonly known as the black and yellow garden spider, writing spider, or corn spider. It is common to the contiguous United States, Hawaii, southern Canada, Mexico, and Central America.
Extremely tiny orb-weaver spider in our lantana wrapping up a tiny ant to add to its ant collection. It's hard to explain just how tiny this is. Maybe 1/32" or 1 mm wide. Smallest one I have ever seen in our lantana. Didn't even think it was a spider when I first saw it. Even the tiny ants it was wrapping up were larger than it. I'm guessing some type of orb weaver. Any ID help appreciated. Sorry for so many of the same thing and also if you don't like spiders. :) Was hoping a butterfly would stop by but no luck so took a lot of the spider and foliage, all handheld.