View allAll Photos Tagged cobweb

Christine with two finished scarves

Dead rose petals and leaves mixed with cobwebs. Yep... We don't rake very often.

copper pipes, cobwebs and purple paint (not that you can tell its purple in the picture)

50/50 merino wool/ silk, silk noils, beads

A female Theridula cf gonygaster

A 'distressed' web

50/50 Australian merino wool / tencel top

Length 73 1/4” (186 cm)

Width 13 1/3" ( 34 сm)

Weight 0,95 oz (27 gm)

Cobweb on a rusty wire brush

50/50 Super fine Australian merino wool / tencel top

Length 75 1/4” (191 cm)

Width 14 1/2" ( 37 сm)

Weight 1,4 oz (41 gm)

The shelves in the Tower of Terror feature various artifacts covered in cobwebs, all adding to the creepy factor.

It is a land with neither night nor day,

Nor heat nor cold, nor any wind, nor rain,

Nor hills nor valleys; but one even plain

Stretches thro' long unbroken miles away:

While thro' the sluggish air a twilight grey

Broodeth; no moons or seasons wax and wane,

No ebb and flow are there among the main,

No bud-time no leaf-falling there for aye,

No ripple on the sea, no shifting sand,

No beat of wings to stir the stagnant space,

And loveless sea: no trace of days before,

No guarded home, no time-worn restingplace

No future hope no fear forevermore.

 

Christina Rossetti~

 

naughty sophisticate COBWEB dress large

Creator : Freyja Shieldmaiden

Paisley Daisy, Camomile (196, 84, 21)

Canon E0s 550d. Pentacon lens 50mm f1.8.

....on my fence on a misty morning. I don't like spiders but I do have a grudging respect for the skill of their cobwebs.

Nikkon 80-400mm VR at 400mm, hand held. The morning dew on this cobweb was about 60' away. I'm pretty impressed with this result as it was about the third shot I had taken with my new lens.

dewdrop covered cobwebs on a sunday morning.

Made of Yarn Place "Graceful" self-striping cobweb weight merino, in the Shetland Tea Shawl pattern from A Gathering of Lace

Cobweb in my garden one morning with drops of water.

cobwebs in the garden

Még első kép a géppel, azonnal ki kellett próbálnom a régi smc objektívvel. :)

Today I had to say goodbye to Cobweb, our pygmy goat. She was 14 and her age suddenly caught up with her.

 

Up until yesterday she had been an active, feisty character, who greeted me each morning with bleats as soon as I opened the door and made my way down to her paddock. Unfortunately, her little legs collapsed yesterday afternoon when she ran to meet me and could no longer manage to hold up her dumpy body. I knew then that she couldn't carry on.

 

She came to us in 1998, along with her half-sister Dumpling. They were supposed to be 'organic lawnmowers' but usually spurned the grass in favour of hedges, trees and pretty much anything else they could find. Below is a photo of the pair of them with my children. Seems such a long time ago - my daughter was a toddler there and is now nearly 16... and my son is now over 6ft tall and nearly 18! They named the goats - but Cobweb was never the delicate thing her name might suggest! She liked to butt people and gave me quite a few bruises over the years.

 

Cobweb's horns grew incredibly long and started to cause her problems, so they were shortened - hence the odd looking horns in her later years.

 

She was dominated by Dumpling and got butted out of the way frequently by her. When Dumpling died about 18 months ago I thought that Cobweb would pine - after all, goats are herd animals - but instead she thrived and got even fatter!

 

It seems like the end of an era and I shall miss her strong character.

Discovered this #towering (relatively speaking) #cobweb #castle at #Barnes #Nature #Reserve while #jogging about after a #Gym session an hour earlier at #Kew #Bridge.

That these little #spiders build such towering structures all by themselves #strand by strand has always impressed me for their hard work.

Looks like my #iPhone7 has done a good job too capturing this #magnificient artefact

Each year around early September there is an extraordinary display of webs, there are literally thousands of them. As the sun peeked over the trees this incredible light poured in over the field illuminating the webs. As the temperature had cooled the webs were alll covered in dew.Just amazing

 

View On Black

Cobweb on solitary marsh reed

Cobweb Thistle, also known as Western Thistle (Cirsium occidentale), Photographed at Clear Lake State Park in Lake County, Caifornia.

Cobweb shawl with natural wool (not dyed) and aplication of silk yarn. Double face.

Cobweb wrap by Gladys Amedro, knit with Heirloom Knitting's Merino Lace.

Wing design and construction for AtmosTheatre production of Midsummer Night's Dream. Photo courtesy of AtmosTheatre

taken on a damp misty morning in Chidlow, Western Australia, noticed thousands of cobwebs covered in dew.

This is light shining on cobwebs.

Nihonhimea mundula, from the family of Cobweb spiders.

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