I love seeing this shot, and it's a lot of fun to replicate!
P.S. I have patreon now! It's very new, but check it out if you want more art references, bonus info, tips and shirtless clips:
[Image IDs: three gifs of a beautiful, long-haired dog with alert ears in slow motion. It’s dark enough that the dog, the slightly hilly horizon, and the clouds are all stark black, but the sky is still lit up with pale orange and blue-grey. In all the gifs the dog’s pupils are reflecting a bright white, but its features are otherwise impossible to make out aside from its silhouette. In the first gif the dog is looking to the right and turns towards the camera to look right at the viewer. In the second gif the dog is looking at the viewer and lowering its head toward the ground, its fur billowing a little with the movement. In this one, there’s a very faint light that illuminates some grass and what appears to be the dog’s lower canines, or potentially a white patch under its nose. In the final gif the dog is loping just to the right of the camera, its head lowered and tail wagging. /End ID]
black shepherd at night | source
The Common Green Lacewing: these tiny insects pupate within loosely-woven cocoons that measure just 3-6mm (about 1/8 to 1/4 inch) in diameter
The lacewing will spend about 5 days maturing within its cacoon, before it cuts an opening in the top and emerges as a fully-developed adult.
The larvae of the green lacewing (family Chrysopidae) are also known as "aphid lions," due to their skill/appetite when it comes to hunting aphids. They're widely used in agricultural contexts to help eradicate pests, because they are voracious predators that also commonly prey upon caterpillars, leafhoppers, planthoppers, thrips, spiders, mites, and insect eggs.
As it nears the end of its larval stage, a lacewing will spin a small cacoon out of silk and then tuck itself inside, allowing the pupal phase to begin; its tiny green body is often partially visible through the thin, loosely-woven walls of the cacoon.
These breathtaking photos of a lacewing climbing out of its cacoon were taken by a Danish photographer named Frederik Leck Fischer.
When a lacewing first emerges from a cacoon, its wings are still compactly folded down against its body; the wings then gradually begin to expand until they have reached their full size, which usually takes about an hour or two.
Fischer's photographs provide an excellent account of this entire process.
Here are just a few other images of the common green lacewing:
Sources & More Info
University of California's Integrated Pest Management Program: The Green Lacewing
Texas A&M's Field Guide to the Insects of Texas: Green Lacewings
Washington State University: Lacewings
Tennessee State University: Fact Sheet on the Green Lacewing (PDF download)
Pacific Pests & Pathogens: Green Lacewings/Biocontrol
by Trung Bao
Feb - Apr 2025, different tree bark textures & colours
may you make art long enough to realize all the advice you learned online as a tween is made up bullshit
Kingfisher and Great Egret lined up just right
This was one of the tiniest dragonflies I have ever seen, and they were all over in the Masai Mara.
The closest species I have found is the Wandering Glider (Pantala flavescens), but that doesn't seem quite right. The dragonflies I saw were darker and more metallic in tone, with gold-ish patches at the base of their wings. But I was still glad to learn about Wandering Gliders, because they are found all over the world and seem to migrate incredible distances, even crossing the Himalayas. Isn't that amazing? You can read about them here.
If you ever need a reference for alien eggs, just accidentally freeze hardboiled eggs 😆
Hi it’s me puddleorganism if you’re confused why you got a billion hoops from me
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