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<blockquote data-quote="Adraps11" data-source="post: 59089" data-attributes="member: 4220"><p>This is a closeup of a piece. This was done before I entered Art School. It was a piece describing Manic depression.</p><p>That spider is Latrodectus Variolus, the northern widow. In the drawing some of the legs look a bit to long, but this was before I was taught proportions, and the spider was done from memory.</p><p>I live in Indiana and find these widows in and around abandoned structures and junkpiles.</p><p>They have some of the strongest web strands of the Cob Weaver Family. They usually have a tunnel- like retreat near the ground or in the crooks and holes of rotted trees.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Adraps11, post: 59089, member: 4220"] This is a closeup of a piece. This was done before I entered Art School. It was a piece describing Manic depression. That spider is Latrodectus Variolus, the northern widow. In the drawing some of the legs look a bit to long, but this was before I was taught proportions, and the spider was done from memory. I live in Indiana and find these widows in and around abandoned structures and junkpiles. They have some of the strongest web strands of the Cob Weaver Family. They usually have a tunnel- like retreat near the ground or in the crooks and holes of rotted trees. [/QUOTE]
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