Ladybird 10*8 Inch Fine Art Mounted Print

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wooden-chair-next-to-kitchen (4).jpg
pot-plant-on-wooden-stool.jpg
SSA-7116-7116.jpg
dining-room-with-wooden-furniture (9).jpg
stack-of-books-on-wooden-stool (14).jpg
wooden-bench-with-dried-grasses (21).jpg
dining-room-with-wooden-furniture (6).jpg
home-office-with-desktop-computer.jpg
close-up-of-ornaments-on-shelving (8).jpg
dining-room-with-a-large-cactus-plant.jpg
room-with-fancy-armchair-and-floor-lamp (2).jpg
wooden-chair-next-to-kitchen (4).jpg

Ladybird 10*8 Inch Fine Art Mounted Print

A$80.00

The Tiny Treasure Print Collection by Wild Wing Images is a celebration of the tiny ones. Tiny moments, tiny creatures and tiny plants. Shards of nature, color and happiness to brighten small spaces. These small prints look beautiful displayed individually or in carefully chosen sets with a common theme. Each print is professionally printed on Fine Art Canson Photographique Rag, mounted on museum grade matt board and comes with a hand signed certificate of authenticity that includes the story behind the image.

Print size is 10 x 8 inches (25.40 x 20.32 cm) mounted on white matt board with outer dimensions measuring 14 x 11 inches (35.56 x 27.94 cm) to fit standard size frames. Please note the print is unframed. Various framed mockups displayed in my online shop are included for inspiration only and may not be dimensionally accurate.

IKEA, KMART and Harvey Norman are good options for economical frames in various colors and standard sizes.

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I was in my Flying Duck Orchid patch, an old clearing, disturbed by humans and sadly littered with old tin, bottles and dumped tyres.  The little Paracaleana nigrita orchids grow amidst the rubbish.  It makes it easy to find them year after year but makes me so sad that people dump rubbish in the forest and think it Ok?  Anyway the Flying Duck orchids had finished, the tiny flowers withered, their dark glandular little beaks tucked into the body, the translucent red deepened in colour.  Nearby a patch of small bright yellow and pure white everlastings had come into bloom, as I came close to have a look there was a rush of movement as a flock of small black moths were disturbed, they flew around and settled on new flowers, sucking nectar out of the centres.  I was lying on my belly trying to photograph the moths when I noticed a bright orange Ladybird.  She was systematically claiming up the stalks of the everlastings, I have always wanted to photograph a Ladybird with my macro lens so turned my attention to this tiny creature.  I was trying to figure out what she was doing and when I loaded th images on the computer I figured it out.  She was catching tiny bugs and and green caterpillars that were living on the stalks.  Interesting!! Very agile little critter, she would often climb up one stalk then reach out to an adjacent flower and go down that stalk!!