another day another dollar

seen from Italy
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from China

seen from Malaysia

seen from China

seen from Japan

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Türkiye

seen from Malaysia
seen from T1

seen from Malaysia
seen from T1
another day another dollar

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Snake’s head fritillary! I’ve seen these for years in posts by friends in the UK but had never seen one in person so I bought some bulbs last autumn. Charming little checkered bells.
Freyer's Fritillary (Melitaea arduinna), family Nymphalidae, Turkey
photograph by Kurtuluş Şimşek
Glanville fritillary caterpillar (Melitaea cinxia) By: Unknown photographer From: Wildlife Fact-File 1990s
Wingsday Fritillaries & Red Feather Clover
Niobe fritillaries (Fabriciana niobe) on red feather clover (Trifolium rubens) illustrated by Paul-André Robert for his Les Papillons dans la Nature (1934).
View more Wingsday posts.
View more insect posts and illustrations.

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just a few of the many butterflies from cennet cehennem *(paradise)
🌷 🖤 🏁 🌿 🐛 🐌 ✨ // still life with fritillaries & hellebores // gouache on hot press paper
A gift painted for a friend for their help with top surgery stuff! fritillaries are wild; they're actually checkered that way in nature, and hellebores really do come in black.
A lovely Speyeria(?) species sipping on lavender in Western Montana. Looking a bit tattery, but still very active and seemed to be getting around just fine!
Yes, looks like one of the fritillaries! Don't ask me which one, they all look the same to me. Love this friend, though. Butterflies and moths can fly with a truly shocking amount of damage to their wings.