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by Carol Senske
$98.00
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Product Details
Queen duvet cover (88" x 88") featuring the image "Common House Spider - Parasteatoda tepidariorum" by Carol Senske. Our soft microfiber duvet covers are hand sewn and include a hidden zipper for easy washing and assembly. Your selected image is printed on the top surface with a soft white surface underneath. All duvet covers are machine washable with cold water and a mild detergent.
Design Details
These spiders live with us but you may never really notice them unless cleaning dark corners or looking closely on the outside niches of your house. ... more
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2 - 3 business days
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Average Rating (4.70 Stars):
Antonio Cabos Domingo
April 2nd, 2024
All fine
Paulo Avila
November 16th, 2023
Very good material.
Sharon Broderick
September 29th, 2023
Very happy with the duvet . quality printing ! I also got the shower curtain money well spent !
Carla Rose Kelly
September 6th, 2023
Love this duvet cover in the Tree Fort Suite of the Elk View Lodge, Fernie, BC, Canada.
Carla Rose Kelly
September 6th, 2023
Love this duvet cover in the Tree Fort Suite of the Elk View Lodge, Fernie, BC, Canada.
These spiders live with us but you may never really notice them unless cleaning dark corners or looking closely on the outside niches of your house. They are not aggressive toward people and are kind of chicken, as a matter of fact. If they get scared they often pretend to be dead or drop down from their web and run for the hills. They mate and lay eggs at any time of the year, and each papery egg sack can have, on average, 100 to 400 spiderlings that hatch. Other spider do eat these guys. If you noticed the gray pile of round-looking things out of focus on the left, that is a bunch of newly hatched spiderlings. The brown papery thing is an egg sack.
This picture was taken August 25, 2013, in Green Lane, Pennsylvania, USA, on the outside of our house under a window. I used the Canon T4i with my Tamron macro lens (1:1).
Here's a little write up you might enjoy:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parasteatoda_tepidariorum
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 duvet covers ship from our production facility within 2 - 3 business days of your order.
$98.00
Doris Potter
Wow! You got it all - the adult, the spiderlings and the egg sacs! Great capture and information Mother Nature!
Carol Senske replied:
Thanks, Doris:>) I'm always amazed at how hairy spiders are:>)