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A seadon of mists and mellow fruitfulness.

Morning droplets on a web hanging between the quince on the ornamental shrub by the back door.

Notice the spider web (or is it a sticky situation) streaming from the beak of this female Ruby-throated hummingbird to the lily's stigma. They use spider web as "glue" to hold their nesting material together.

View On Black

  

Experience is never limited, and it is never complete, it is an immense sensibility, a kind of spider web of the finest silken threads suspended in the chamber of consciousness, and catching every air-borne particle in its tissue". ~Henry James

  

Cool Facts From: www.hummingbirds.net

 

The walnut-sized nest, built by the female, is constructed on a foundation of bud scales attached to a tree limb with spider silk; lichens camouflage the outside, and the inside is lined with dandelion, cattail, or thistle down. The nest will stretch to contain the growing nestlings, and may sometimes be reused (rebuilt) the following year.

  

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This photo is posted for design inspiration. The design content and photos posted in this album are not my own, but posts from external sources around the web. For use in commercial and personal projects contact the original source of the content posted in the Album "Web Graphic Design Resources".

Old web or Nuctenea umbratica.

Some mornings are perfect to illuminate spider webs in the grass. I'm always amazed to see how much insect and arachnid life is present in grasslands, and there is no better view of it than in the presence of dewey spiderwebs or a column of midges. Incredibly, these small life forms are the base for many of the incredible bird species we find here in the Dakotas.

Photo Credit: Krista Lundgren/USFWS

From a cold morning at Polblue, Barrington Tops.

A beautifully misty, moist morning with glistening pearls of dew on the spider webs

Taken at an abandoned missile factory near Arrochar.

This is a creative commons image, which you may freely use by linking to this page. Please respect the photographer and his work.

 

An extensive web on the cedar tree in my front yard very early on a misty morning--Charlotte Court House, Virginia

 

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.

  

Moist capture in a web in a foggy morning in the south of France

slide the contrast bar to the right till the street art disappears

Yale University Art Gallery, New Heaven, CT.

New macro attachments from ebay arrived.

Spider webs left from last summer. They show up more once the barn dust covers them.

Getting back to manual macro photography is always a good feeling, even if it's just 30 mins. People mistake this art to shooting small insects. True in a way but what's more important is the several angles, level of detail, light factor, gear settings and time spent before deciding the frame. 99% of the frames are a failure but there is that one special technical frame that would have pushed us to the limits, whether the rest of the world appreciates or understands it doesn't matter!

lots of different kinds of spiders about just now, some small and some very big!

One of the never installed Tiffany windows bought by Sarah Winchester. Supposedly, one of the last windows comissioned for the Winchester house. It's likely that the Widow Winchester drew the design for this window herself and mailed it to the Tiffany glass company for them to execute.

 

There are 13 "jewels" embedded in the design of the window (see the notes to find them all). The number 13 occurs in several different places around the house including a 12-candel chandelier that had a thirteenth candle added by Mrs. Winchester's craftsmen.

 

The most expensive Tiffany Window on the property is installed in the house here.

 

This Web window hangs in the "garage" behind a large glass wall with dozens of other never used windows and unused rolls of textured wall covering. This shot by globalglenn is a wide angle that shows more of the windows on display.

 

And here is another photo of this window in it's current context.

The window is lit from behind with a single light bulb.

Bretagne, Rosnoën

crédit photo : POPH

Spiny Orb Weaver (six-spined spider) web in the sunlight.

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