Worth noting, real spiders can produce both sticky threads and not-sticky threads. In fact, spiderwebs are actually a mix of the two, which is how the spiders avoid becoming entangled themselves — they remember where the not-sticky threads are and walk only on those…
Also, the sticky threads have “beads” of stickiness along them. It’s not an absolute coating. But it’s amusing that they made the gown out of both. If it was deliberate, they also deliberately made it so it drags on the ground. Trolling, maybe?
Regarding the beads of stickiness, I did not know that… I thought (assumed) it would be continuous. Ya learn somethin’ new every day 🙂
…as for the rest — trolling… probably. Arsenic does often seem to wind up in difficult circumstances… you’d think she’d be a little less naive, for it.
Spider silk is very flammable – if only vampires wasn’t that too…
Most fibers are flammable; it’s a “surface area” thing, just like dust.
Worth noting, real spiders can produce both sticky threads and not-sticky threads. In fact, spiderwebs are actually a mix of the two, which is how the spiders avoid becoming entangled themselves — they remember where the not-sticky threads are and walk only on those…
Also, the sticky threads have “beads” of stickiness along them. It’s not an absolute coating. But it’s amusing that they made the gown out of both. If it was deliberate, they also deliberately made it so it drags on the ground. Trolling, maybe?
Regarding the beads of stickiness, I did not know that… I thought (assumed) it would be continuous. Ya learn somethin’ new every day 🙂
…as for the rest — trolling… probably. Arsenic does often seem to wind up in difficult circumstances… you’d think she’d be a little less naive, for it.
Hahahhahahahahaha. Ok, this is exceptionally funny. What a cool dress, aside from the minor issue. XD