I had no time to prepare for this photo. It came about with no planning, no thought process other than “Grab the camera!” and no control over almost anything including my own point of view. A few minutes before this shot was taken the sun had not yet crested the horizon, and a few seconds after I clicked the shutter the spider had skittered down and started to disassemble its web altogether. It was an incredibly fortunate moment of serendipity, and one that I’m thrilled to have been able to capture with my camera.
Shortly before I had to leave for work my son and I noticed this large spider web in the back yard, which we happened to see while looking out the window just kind of at random. One of us, I’m not sure who, remarked at how the web was lit up in the morning sunlight, creating a scene that had hitherto been hidden in plain sight without the incoming light. As we examined it through the kitchen window we saw the spider still asleep, presumably, in the middle of the web which made it feel like we were witnessing something that had been frozen in time. That’s when it occurred to me that I could, at the very least, attempt to take a picture and even if it didn’t turn out at all at least I would know that I tried.
I snatched my Nikon D750 with 105mm macro lens from the shelf, went outside with my son, and then carefully approached the spiderweb which was still absolutely drenched in sunlight. The last thing I wanted to do was disturb the spider, its web, or anything else so I took great pains to tiptoe around the yard and sidestep anything that might be connected to the spider web. I wasn’t sure what exposure settings to use, or even what I was hoping to capture with my camera…all I knew was that this was a scene worth photographing and I wanted to do it. Somehow.
I ended up dialing in f/5.6, 1/180 second, with an Auto-ISO of 1600 to get the shot you see above. I wasn’t particularly close to the spider or else I would have used a smaller aperture to keep the depth of field under control, but in the end I kind of wish I had. f/5.6 worked fine, but I wish the spider was just a bit sharper and the web a bit more in focus. Also, I think my presence did have the unintended consequence of waking up the spider…possibly due to the noise of my footsteps or subtle variations in air pressure as my body moved closer to the web. Whatever caused it, the spider soon started scooting south and I only had a second or two to take this picture before the entire scene changed. The spider began disassembling its food-catching creation and before we knew it, all that remained of the web was a thin strand of silk. The spider drew itself, and what was left of its overnight creation, up into the tree above.
My son and I were kind of amazed at what we had just witnessed, and as I write this I’m still not quite sure what to make of it. Is this behavior normal? Did the spider pack up it web like we might pack up a tent, only to unfurl it the next night? Or did it just start over altogether once the sun came down? Did it move to another location? So many questions with so few answers, but at least I got a fun picture out of it :)



