Delias callista (Jordan, 1912) is a butterfly of Papua New Guinea.
Its wingspan is about 5 cm.
This bead butterfly is woven of 11 colours.
The bead pattern is available at https://bead-patterns.com/beadpattern/butterfly-delias-callista
Delias callista (Jordan, 1912) is a butterfly of Papua New Guinea.
Its wingspan is about 5 cm.
This bead butterfly is woven of 11 colours.
The bead pattern is available at https://bead-patterns.com/beadpattern/butterfly-delias-callista
Delias timorensis (Boisduval, 1836) inhabits Australia and Asia.
The wingspan is about 60–70 mm for males and 64–71 mm for females.
The bead butterfly is woven of 10 colours.
The bead pattern is available at https://bead-patterns.com/beadpattern/butterfly-delias-timorensis-small
Delias timorensis. babberica (Talbot, 1939) (Babar) is an Australian butterfly.
Its wingspan is about 60-71 mm.
The bead butterfly is woven of 8 colours.
The bead pattern is available at https://bead-patterns.com/beadpattern/butterfly-delias-timorensis-babberica-mini
Graphium weiskei (Ribbe, 1900) or Purple Spotted Swallowtail inhabits only mountain regions of Papua New Guinea. It lives at the height 1200-3000 meters above sea level and spends most of its time high in the forest canopy.
The wingspan is 5-6 cm.
This bead butterfly is woven of 16 colours.
The bead pattern is available at https://bead-patterns.com/beadpattern/butterfly-graphium-weiskei
Junonia orithya (Linnaeus, 1758) is a butterfly which flies in Africa, southern and south-eastern Asia, and in Australia.
In India it is known as the Blue Pansy, in southern Africa its common name is the Eyed Pansy.
In Australia this butterfly is called the Blue Argus.
The wingspan of the butterfly is about 4 cm.
This bead butterfly is woven of 16 colours.
The bead pattern is available at https://bead-patterns.com/beadpattern/butterfly-junonia-orithya
Nacaduba biocellata (C. & R. Felder, 1865), or the Two -Spotted Line Blue,(first described by Cajetan and Rudolf Felder, father and son,Austrian entomologists in 1865) is a 20 mm wingspan Indo-Australian butterfly also inhabiting Singapore. Its pale-yellow caterpillar feeds on acacia and turns to red (or sometimes green) colour before becoming a pupa. It takes the butterfly of about a fortnight from a new-born egg to an imago (an adult butterfly).
The bead butterfly is woven of 13 colours.
The bead pattern is available at https://bead-patterns.com/beadpattern/nacaduba-biocellata-butterfly
Ornithoptera alexandrae (Rothschild, 1907), or Queen Alexandra’s birdwing is the biggest butterfly in the world.
The wingspan of females is up to 27 cm.
Males (and we are to weave a male) are a bit smaller.
Ornithoptera alexandrae inhabits Australian forests.
The bead butterfly is woven of 16 colours.
The bead pattern is available at https://bead-patterns.com/beadpattern/butterfly-ornithoptera-alexandrae-small
Ornithoptera euphorion (Gray, 1852), or the the Cairns birdwing is an Australlian butterfly. The span of the wings is about 7 cm.
This bead butterfly is woven of 19 colours.
The bead pattern is available at https://bead-patterns.com/beadpattern/butterfly-ornithoptera-euphorion
Ornithoptera paradisea (Staudinger 1893), or the paradise birdwing is a rare butterfly of Papua New Guinea. The wingspan of the butterfly is about 15 cm.
This beade butterfly is woven of 6 colours.
The bead pattern is available at https://bead-patterns.com/beadpattern/butterfly-ornithoptera-paradisea-micro
Ornithoptera priamus (Linnaeus, 1758), or the Cape York birdwing, or the Priam’s birdwing found in the central and south Moluccas, New Guinea, Bismarck Archipelago, Solomon Islands, and north-east Australia. The wingspan is about 12 cm.
The bead butterfly is woven of 8 colours.
The bead pattern is available at https://bead-patterns.com/beadpattern/butterfly-ornithoptera-priamus-mini