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by Carol Senske
Regular Price: $25.50
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$20.40
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Clearwing Hawk Moth - Hemaris thysbe Galaxy s8 case by Carol Senske. Protect your Galaxy S8 with an impact-resistant, slim-profile, hard-shell case. The image is printed directly onto the case and wrapped around the edges for a beautiful presentation. Simply snap the case onto your Galaxy S8 for instant protection and direct access to all of the phone's features!
Design Details
These moths are strong, fast fliers. They hover like hummingbirds at flowers (usually with one foot resting on the bloom) and sip nectar. I think... more
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3 - 4 business days
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Protect your Galaxy S8 with an impact-resistant, slim-profile, hard-shell case. The image is printed directly onto the case and wrapped around the edges for a beautiful presentation. Simply snap the case onto your Galaxy S8 for instant protection and direct access to all of the phone's features!
Average Rating (4.69 Stars):
Dolores Nadwondy
March 25th, 2024
Love the colors. Wish it was make from a non-slip material.
Beverly Jackson
March 23rd, 2024
Love, love love the iPhone case. It is nice and strong. Great graphics.
Adrianne Opie
March 20th, 2024
Beautiful
Manolo Manterola
March 20th, 2024
202403052311HF99I3 One Month waiting
Denise Hie
March 20th, 2024
Top notch quality and how wonderful to carry this art around with me!
Andrus Raudsepp
March 20th, 2024
Very nice solid accurate phone cover. Pleased with order.
These moths are strong, fast fliers. They hover like hummingbirds at flowers (usually with one foot resting on the bloom) and sip nectar. I think they look like flying crayfish.
I isolated the moth and added a layer of texture and color.
Here is a nice little write up on them:
http://www.silkmoths.bizland.com/hthysbe.htm
Photographed with a Canon T4i camera and a Tamron 90mm Macro lens f/2.8 1:1
I always wanted to try photography, and my retirement offered an opportunity to do just that. The natural world is my first love. Here you will find pictures of things both large (landscapes, for instance) and small (macro) that catch my eye. I hope the images serve as a window into the natural world many of you don't have the chance to see. In a sense, I'm trying to create a guided nature trail, sharing what information I have about the subject. I'm always grateful for new and better information and welcome all input. Learning is food for the mind and soul. Nothing is ever harmed in the picture-taking process, but some things that wander into our home (like spiders) are carefully removed from the house after they serve as "models"....
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All galaxy s8 cases ship from our production facility within 3 - 4 business days of your order.
$20.40
Bette Devine 15 Days Ago
Marvellous macro. I did not know that there were moths that sipped nectar!!!
Carol Senske replied:
Quite a few, actually. Yuccas are pollinated by a moth, for example. It's an amazing process! This info from Google. Yucca Moths (Tegeticula sp.) By Beatriz Moisset Yucca moth is inside the flower of a yucca.This yucca moth is inside the flower of a yucca, Yucca glauca. Photo by Ann Cooper, BugGuide.net. Tegeticula sp.Tegeticula sp. Photo by M.J. Hatfield, BugGuide.net. Yucca moths on a yucca flower.Yucca moths on a yucca flower. Photo by Alan Cressler. Yucca moths on a yucca flower.Yucca moths on a yucca flower. Photo by Alan Cressler. One of the most extraordinary partnerships between an insect and the plant that it pollinates is that of the yucca and the yucca moth. They are so interdependent that one cannot live without the other. Actually, there are a number of species of yucca, each with its corresponding partner, a species of Tegeticula or Parategeticula moth. This mutually beneficial relationship probably started as a relationship of exploitation with the moth feeding on the yucca. This is still the case with a number of close relatives of Tegeticula, members of the Prodoxidae family. The yucca moth is a non-descript, small, whitish moth that blends well with the color of the yucca blossoms where it spends most of its brief adult life. A very distinctive feature of Tegeticula is the absence of the long tongue, characteristic of most moths and butterflies. Instead, it has tentacles around its mouth that serve a very important function and make possible its job as a pollinator. The adult yucca moth does not need to feed because it is so short lived. However, the female gathers pollen, which it holds under its chin with the help of the tentacles. Males and females emerge from their cocoons in the spring in synchrony with the blossoming of the species of yucca with which they are partners. They meet and mate on the yucca blossoms and then the job of the females starts. She visits the anthers of the flower and scrapes the pollen from several of them shaping it into a large lump. Then she leaves in search of another inflorescence, not just another flower in the same bunch but in a different plant altogether, assuring in this manner the cross pollination of the yucca. When she arrives at a new plant, she inspects the flowers and chooses the ones that are at the right stage. She also checks if there are already eggs laid in the flower’s ovary. She can detect the smell of other f...
Bunny Clarke 19 Days Ago
Gorgeous capture Carol.
Carol Senske replied:
Thanks, Bunny. They are such fun to watch.
Brian Tada
Love the wing action in this magnificent and stunning capture, Carol! F/L
Carol Senske replied:
They are something of a challenge but worth the effort:>). I do so appreciate your lovely comment, Brian!
Matthew Livsey
Hi, Mother! You should paint this piece...It is beautiful!!!
Carol Senske replied:
What a lovely thing to say, Matthew! Thanks so much but I have no talent with a brush:>) You paint it! I'd love to see how you'd interpret it.
Laur Iduc
Great shot! L/Fav
Carol Senske replied:
Many, many thanks for your wonderful compliment and the L/F - much appreciated!
Nava Jo Thompson
This is so pretty--great capture---l/v/f
Carol Senske replied:
Hi, Nava Jo! Hope you've been well and busy. Many thanks, my dear, for this vist and all your support - it is valued:>)
Anne Pearson
Gorgeous work :o)
Carol Senske replied:
How lovely of you to stop in and leave this beautiful comment! Thanks:>)
Jaclyn Hughes Photography
They are cute lil buggers. I managed to get a few shots of one this summer. They are quick!
Carol Senske replied:
They are such fun to watch and I've never seen them still except one time when one was still groggy in the early morning and sitting on a fern. Thank you for this lovely comment!