View allAll Photos Tagged ogre
A tiny species of robber fly with a rather whimsical name (unless you are a gnat...). Horn Prairie in Fayette County, Illinois
An adorable couple who live in a charming cottage deep in the woods with plenty of room for guests in the boarded up tower.
But sadly for them they are running short of guests as they so much enjoy having them ... for dinner.
They'd enjoy having you.
byo veggies.
Happy Shocktober
“Seven years, Dawn. Working with the Slayer. Seeing my friends get more and more powerful... a witch. A demon. Hell, I could fit Oz in my shaving kit, but come a full moon, he had a wolfy mojo not to be messed with. Powerful, all of them. And I'm the guy who fixes the windows."
-Joss Whedon-
Featuring
AZOURY France - Ogre shoes for The Underdog
* SLurl: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Isle%20RFyre/144/125/22
Dead Dollz - Fright Night / Cosplay Edition for The Epiphany Gacha
* SLurl: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/The%20Epiphany/188/132/27
* Mirror sim: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Fuyumi/126/127/1015
Denver's Lilly Shape for Lelutka Bento Head for Tres Chic
* SLurl: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Nika/153/139/22
Location: Anduril
Brown trout (Salmo trutta fario), Kalser Bach, Kals am Großglockner, East Tyrol, Austria
Osttirol_108
2016 07 25
Kimono: tomoto, kimono blood white
Horn: tomoto, dragon horn black (Gacha)
Hair: AMITOMO / Minimalism GACHA / 1 RARE
(Kustum9)
Vail: *{( konpeitou )}* Yami-Neko 5 : kanashibari vail
(Origami Gacha)
Flute: {iD} x +HILU+ / FlutE (R) Red [FEMALE]**
(Gacha)
Image of sound… 大神
Blog: ~ le soleil ~
For more information have to blog <33
Thanks so much for your time♡♡(*•̀ᴗ•́)♡♡
Many thanks to you!
Always a delight to come across an ogre spider, this one a little female seen at night-time.
These spiders do not spin conventional webs, instead they hang out like this with a tiny silken net strung between their front legs when hunting, ready to ensnare a passing meal.
Here, I've captured a moment in time of her in the process of making her net.
Asianopis subrufa female, 10 mm body length.
© All rights reserved.
Carved by Sculptor Adrian Wright from a 17-tonne limestone boulder from Carnforth. It was carved using hand tools and took around 700 hours to complete over a period of five months. The finished Sea Ogre is two and a half metres high, two metres wide and weighs in at 12 tonnes.
The Ogre - revisited. I decided on a closer crop of this image, as it gives more detail of the Ogre, and gives a 'mystical' look with the water surrounding him, almost like a mist.
165 sec exposure using a 10 stop ND grad filter. D7200.
. .☆━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━☆.
. .┊ ▷ HAM. Ogre Ears
♡ Channel your inner swamp royalty with these cute cheap ears. Reziseable and made to match Velour Skin tone 'Python'.
For more info, check the MP listing above!
. .☆━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━☆. .
It's spring and it's all happening here, east coast New South Wales, Australia.
Excited to have my first redback of the season by my house back door...and a handsome ogre spider by the front.
These spiders are also commonly called net-casters due to their highly unique mode of hunting (they do not spin conventional webs, but remain in the foliage with a tiny silken net strung between their front legs, ready to ensnare a passing meal, mostly during night-time hours).
This is a male, with his remarkable pedipalps hanging down in front of his face.
Asianopis subrufa, 20 mm body length.
© All rights reserved.
Just minutes before I took this bathers were frolicking in the waves, children were carving out memories in the sand and even worse that there rock was full of brides and softboxes! But then this dark ugly cloud turned up and drove everyone away. How fortuitous...*rubs hands together!*
This image taught me not to mess with the editing tools on Instagram, it was just fine as is!
Thank you for passing by :)
* * *
Arachtober 24
An ogre spider (also known as net-caster)... spinning her trap of silk between her two front legs.
These spiders are opportunist hunters and once the net has been spun, she will patiently wait for unsuspecting prey to pass by when, with lightning speed, she will hurl the net over the prey to immobilize it.
Female 10 mm body length
© All rights reserved.
I came across a tiny, juvenile female ogre spider performing her acrobatics. Also commonly known as net-casting spiders.
These spiders do not make conventional webs. Instead, when hunting, they are suspended by lines of silk, and hold a silken net between the front legs with which they ensnare passing prey. Or when resting and not actively hunting, will assume this unique positioning as seen here.
This is a dorsal view, body length just 5 mm, family Deinopidae.
© All rights reserved.
I'm not sure, but I think this may be a Gnat Ogre (Holcocephala). It's a tiny robber fly, about 7mm in length.
221028_Little_Robber_Fly_Face
An ogre outpost established near a small oasis in the desert.
The architecture was inspired by Warcraft.
A tutorial for the hut can be found here.
Flickr Lounge: two of a kind
Day 192/365
Each leaf of this plant had one of the tiny robber flies often called gnat ogres on its tip. This second one flew from its tip to land below the other one, I assume to check it out for mating or territorial defense. I took several shots and got one I like, with almost a spotlight appearance. SOOC except for a small crop.
I envisioned an old ogre couple buried here, with their gnarled, oddly-sculpted tombstones matching their gnarled, oddly sculpted bodies.
Seen during this spring's exploration of the desert southwest, Utah specifically.
This is a 2-row panorama, assembled in PTGui and touched up in Photoshop, as is my usual workflow.
My usual workflow is to not use much (if any) extra lighting on a scene, but there was a workshop at this location and so I did my best to work with their copious amounts of lighting. (The actual scene they were lighting were far, far to the left and in a slightly different direction, but I didn't mind the way the light fell on these rocks, so I grabbed some shots.)