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Spider webs everywhere - strewn across the grasses and low lying foliage on this misty morning. Heaven!!
29 September 2015
Sunflowers looking at spiders web.
ISO 100 - 1/800 sec - f/4.0 - 200 mm
Canon EOS 7D - Canon EF 70-200 f/4L IS USM
Processed in Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 4.4
An active hunter, the female Nursery Web spider spins web to protect her young as they are about to hatch to protect them until they are able to venture out alone. She will carry the egg-sac in her fangs before they hatch.
They are a widespread species and are a relatively large spider, (1.5cm long body), closely related to the rarer Raft spider; they can be spotted sunbathing in brambles or on nettles.
I went to Beaver Park this morning quite early, before 8 and it was very foggy and damp out and just as I stepped out of my car I saw a huge spider web draped in dew!!! In the comment section is the whole web and more jewel shots!
Orb weaver spider fixing her dew covered web. I love how you can see the silk coming out of her spinneret!
A look at an Agalenatea redii spider and at its web. The fine web always poses a challenge for stacking, a lot of cleaning is required after retouching. Such a headache!
Stack info: Canon 5D Mark II, Canon MP-E 65 lens
46 natural light exposures at f4.5, ISO 200
Another flower / spider web / water droplet refraction shot. Playing around with these photos can be endless fun. It is somewhat of as gamble, as you never know where the best pattern of drops will be, where your focal plane is, and the position of the flower is also extremely important. I think it worked out well!
My Photoblog: don.komarechka.com