Water Droplets on Sheet Web

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Water droplets on sheet web - photography by Brent VanFossen.

Just as there are many types of spiders, there are many types of webs. A favorite of ours is the sheet web.

Lying flat across plants and grasses, Brent and I are impressed by these diligent web makers as they work on the horizontal rather than vertical. Our front “yard” filled with knick-knick, Oregon Grape, and sahlal, native Pacific Northwest plants, is a haven for sheet web-making spiders.

In the fall, the rain comes down, drenching these sturdy webs with water drops. Brent was able to get in close to capture the droplets without disturbing the web.

I love the patterns, the wet texture, and the lovely colors of nature in this photograph. Made into a puzzle, this one would be a tough image to put together.

Photographing Water Droplets

Water droplets on grass-vertical, photograph copyrighted Brent VanFossenRisk. Danger. Anticipation. And nerves of steel. These are the thrills and spills of photographing water droplets. There is a constant threat of danger as they dangle, so close to the edge, hanging on until the last second…then splat. Gone.

We love photographing water droplets. They are lenses within your lens, offering a new perspective on the world around us. Like tiny fish-eye lenses, they shrink down the scene and give it a circular distortion, smoothing the edges on a harsh, sharp world.

Water droplet on Huckleberry, photograph copyrighted Brent VanFossenWater droplets form from rain and condensation. In nature, they tend to cling to the fine hairs and fibers of plants. They line up in rows along spider webs. They stay for a short time in the early morning of summer before the heat blasts them away for the day. In winter, they can freeze into icicles, creating long daggers off the edges of anything that stays still long enough.

Photographing water droplets is all about timing and perspective. The key is to photograph the droplet before it drops, and not to do anything to encourage it to drop. It sounds much simpler than you might think.

Dew on sheet spider web, photograph copyrighted Brent VanFossenAny wind or motion around or against your subject will usually knock the water droplet off. The heat of your body can cause wind on cool days, shaking the water droplet. This is especially true when photographing delicate dew-covered spider webs. As the heat of the day rises with the sun, a slight breeze can make a mess of your water droplet covered subject.

Keep a good working distance from your subject by using a long lens with a zoom on a tripod. This stabilizes the camera for the often low light situations, allows longer exposures to maximize depth of field, and keeps you back a bit from your subject to ensure you don’t bump it.

Early morning dew on high alpine lupine, Mt Rainier, photograph copyrighted Brent VanFossenWater droplets are found hanging from edges and nestled in leaves and flowers, held there like water storage tanks for as long as possible, feeding and cooling the plant at the same time.

Photographing them may involve bending over your subject and photographing down upon it, or getting low to the ground so you are at “eye level” with the water droplets hanging from grasses, flowers stems, branches, or on spider webs. Be sure and wear water proof gear if you are working within a lot of wet and damp. At least bring a plastic sheet and/or kneeling pad so you don’t get too wet.

As you look through a water droplet, the subjects behind it are reduced down to fit within the small globe. Move slightly to the right or left, up or down, and the view changes, depending upon how close the background subject is.

There are two ways of photographing a water droplet. You can photograph it as part of an overall scene, such as the water droplets on the grasses in the photograph at the top of this article. The water droplets are part of the story of the grasses right after the rain. They look like jewelry, glittering along the grass stem.

Water droplets on grass in series, photograph copyrighted Brent VanFossenThe other method is to photograph the view through the water droplet. The water droplet shrinks the background so we see it clearly, though slightly distorted. It isn’t necessary that we see the whole background since it is inside of the droplet, but it helps to see just enough of an echo of the background to add to the sensation that we are viewing the world beyond through a secondary lens beyond our camera.

If the water droplet is the focus, then keep your camera’s focus on the water droplet, not the background, a challenge with some of today’s auto focus cameras which may fight for a subject to focus on. With the camera on the tripod, focus on the water droplet in the center area of your viewfinder, then turn off the auto focus to position the water drop in your frame as desired. Or switch to manual focus and focus it accordingly.

Fill as much of the frame with the droplet to capture the image inside. Carefully choose how much of the background you want within the picture’s frame, but keep the water droplet on center stage. Remember, the subject is what is seen inside the water drop, not just the water drop. Not all views through a droplet work. Choose your background scene carefully. As with all photographs, keep the scene simple and free from unnecessary distractions.

Water droplets on grasses, photograph copyrighted Brent VanFossenDetermining the aperture and depth of field for the photograph of a water droplet is a challenge. The focus is on the water droplet. What is in focus in front or beyond is part of your creative decisions. If the background is too much in focus, you might lose the water droplet in the picture. If it is too much out of focus, the echo of the background in your image might distract more than echo. A good background perspective choice is to echo the view inside of the water drop, not overwhelm it.

Water droplets on grass in series, photograph copyrighted Brent VanFossenIn the two comparison photographs here, you see that one has more depth of field, so the grasses are visible as lines even though they are still out of focus. The other, vertical image, has a much more narrow depth of field, so the background grasses blur into a soft color behind. We know they are grasses, so it doesn’t matter that we can’t clearly see them. We see them in the water droplets, and get the “impression” they are grasses, so our mind fills in the blank.

Generally, a low to middle range apertures will work best. Bracket your aperture to experiment with the various depth of field perspectives to find the one you like best.

Water Droplets in the Studio

Photographing water droplets is not limited to outdoors in nature. If the weather or lifestyle isn’t cooperating, you can create your own droplets in a studio, be it your kitchen, living room, or photography studio.

Water droplets on flower stem, photograph copyrighted Brent VanFossenUsing the natural light coming in from the sliding glass doors of our living room, we photographed these water droplets on the stem of a flower, with the flower behind it echoing the image inside of the water droplets.

Water droplets on flower stem photographed in a studio situation, photograph copyrighted Brent VanFossenThe stem was held in place with the weight of a lamp in front of the camera on its tripod. We spritzed water onto the stem until we formed a good looking water droplet. You can also use clear glycerin to fake a water droplet. The thick liquid will stay longer and have less chance of falling, too.

The flower behind it was set in a vase, positioned to maximize the image in the droplet and far enough away so our depth of field would still allow for enough recognizable focus to create an image echo.

We used a gold reflector to brighten up and warm the image and balance the side light from the windows, and took a variety of bracketed photographs to make sure we got the effect we wanted.

Water droplet on window screen with flower in behind, photograph copyrighted Brent VanFossenAs we worked, Brent noticed that the process of spraying the water on the stem caused water droplets to sit in the window screen next to the camera, forming many water droplets reflecting the view of the backyard inside of them. He moved the flower behind the window screen and instantly saw dozens of flowers in the water droplets. He played with fill flash and natural light and bracketed across apertures to get the final image here.

Experiment with water droplets to see what you may see. A whole new world inside of a drop of water.

Most water droplet photography requires some familiarity with closeup photography, as well as closeup or macro photography equipment. This includes extension tubes, teleconverters, and close focusing techniques that also keep a wide working distance. For more information on closeup photography, see our online book I Long to Be Close to You: Closeups in Nature Photography, and take time to also look at our online book Bows and Flows of Angel Hair: Patterns in Nature Photography.

Dew-covered Spider Webs

Spiderweb covered with dew, photograph by Brent VanFossen You have to get up early in the morning to catch dew on most things, but especially early when tracking down dew covered spider webs.

Spider webs are incredibly fragile, yet their construction and structure is the strongest of all structures in the world, even manmade. Inch for inch a spider web is stronger than steel, yet they are exceptionally elastic, stretching more than 40% of their length.

Yet, the slightest wind, heavy rain storm, or human crossing a spider web path can destroy it. For a nature photographer, finding the precious preserved spider web covered with dew is a combination of luck, weather, and planning.

Brent spotted a sheet web in the middle of the city, in a vacant lot covered with scrub and grasses. When he arrived early in the morning, luck was with him as the dew of the morning and light misting rains from the evening had collected water drops across the entire surface of the web.

Photographing spider webs requires absolute stillness. If you move, air currents caused by your movements and the heat of your body can shake or shatter the web. As the sun rises, the warmth on the ground causes the wind to rise, bringing more movement and vibration to fight against as you work with slow shutter speeds. Add dew and water droplets on a spider web and any such motion or current can shake all your sparkling jewels away.

The dew will also evaporate quickly with warming temperatures, so you are restrained to photographing early in the morning and in the short window of time between damp and dry.

Luckily, the fall morning remained cool. Brent was able to work the web for a while, moving slowly around with his 200mm lens, giving him working space to keep back from the web but magnification to fill the frame with the droplets.

Spiders aren’t very particular about where they build their webs, aiming for the flight zone of their flying food. Brent battled with the city homes and buildings in the background, struggling to find the magic background that would not distract from the dew-covered web, but also might enhance it.

He tried several positions. One was fairly straight on to the web, and brown, green, and yellow scrubs seem to add some color and depth to the web. Then he moved higher, watching the surface of the web, keeping a careful eye to maintain the camera’s film plane parallel with the plane of the web to get the most web structure and droplets in focus.

Spiderweb covered with dew, photographed with flash, photograph by Brent VanFossen Rising up a little with the tripod gave him the non-descript soft green background he sought. Nothing to distract. He added the 1.4x teleconverter, increasing the magnification and narrowing the background. Holding his breath, he snapped off five or six shots. He played with aperture and shutter, increasing the depth of field on the web but controlling it on the background.

After a while, he decided to add some sparkle to the dew drops with flash. Setting the flash to provide some fill flash, he added a few more spider web images.

Later, on the light table, we examined the collection of dew-covered spider web images. The photographs using the flash were okay, but just okay. They didn’t jump off the light table and scream “AMAZING”. The images with the soft green and yellow background were okay, and fairly interesting, but the image that caught our breath was the one using natural light, zoomed in close to the web so you could feel the fragility, every drop hanging, waiting to drop. This was the magical image.

Spiderweb covered with dew, photographed with natural light, photograph by Brent VanFossenWhat makes this image magic? Its tension. Its beauty. Its simplicity. You know immediately what it is and yet you wonder what it is and how it was done.

For a moment, it reminds you of the stars and planets in the sky traced by the ancients into bulls, horses, gods, and demons. Then you think beads, beaded fabric and lace, all interconnected. Each drop appears like a lens, and you lean in to see what views can be seen through them.

And you wonder. What part of this is real and what part is created? The droplets are so uniform, you wonder if they are there by plan. Slowly, you begin to wonder about the creature that made such a structure.

As with every powerful image, it holds your imagination.

For Brent, well, it was just another morning walk around the neighborhood, looking for spider webs to photograph.

Wonders of Spider Silk

Called one of the wonders of the natural world, spider silk fascinates us. With all our technology over the past 100 years, are still unable to reproduce a substance that is tough, stronger and more flexible than spider silk, the material spiders issue to make spider webs.

Here are some amazing facts and resources to learn more about spider webs and spider silk:

  • The largest orb-webs come from spun spiders in the genus Nephila which may be 2 meters/6 ft in diameter, capable of catching small birds and bats.
  • The largest webs are built by communal spiders, Ixeuticus socialis in Australia that may be 1.2 meter wide and 3.7 meters long (12×4 ft).
  • There are billions of kilometers of spider silk spread across the globe.
  • Author Paul Hillyard says in his book, The Book on Spiders: “For an equal diameter, spider silk is stronger than steel and about as strong as nylon. It is, however much more resilient and can stretch several times before breaking – it is twice as elastic as nylon and more difficult to break than rubber.”
  • Some fishing spiders (Dolomedes) can stay underwater for 45 minutes or more, using air bubbles stored on their abdomens, swimming underwater to attack their food, usually insects and small fish.
  • Spider silk is able to stretch up to 40% of its length without breaking.
  • Many spiders make a “dry” silk and a sticky silk. Spiders use dry silk to create structural frameworks for their webs, particularly evident with orb weavers. Between these radial spokes, the spider strings the sticky silk that ensnares any prey unfortunate enough to venture too close.
  • Spitting spiders spit a formula of gluey venom at prey up to 3/8 of an inch (10mm) away. The glue holds the prey, while the venom paralyzes it.
  • Amazon.com lists over 1700 books on spiders.
  • Some spiders use silk to “fly”, allowing itself to be caught by the breeze and lifted up holding onto the end of the thread. Spiders can travel huge distances. Research records spiders over 14,000 feet/4.500 meters above sea level and in the middle of the ocean 1,500 km/1,000 miles from the nearest land.
  • Spiders can live without food and water for long periods of time.

More Spider Silk Resources