I do this on my tortoises for size comparisons, works great!I'm quite new to having tarantulas (had mine for less then a month), but I've had this idea I've just yet to do it on my tarantula. Take a picture of your spider next to a ruler (they don't have to be on top of each other just in the frame) and then using photoshop just layer via copy the ruler and move it over the spider, that way you don't have to fuss with you spider or anything and you can even take you time and get really precise measurements. Just a little idea I had the other day![]()
The most accurate and consistent method of measurement is to measure the femur, as this seems to remain fairly uniform. But, people just don't seem to impressed by, "My T blondi is 1 inch!"1. Select two points on a spider
2. Measure the distance between the two points in a straight line
3. Use the measurement and mention the locations of the two points.
DO NOT use estimates of how the measurements might be in different conditions, for example in parallel dimensions or on steroids, unless you had those conditions while taking the measurement.
Also, would be good if the measurement was done between two fixed points on the spider instead of points that change distance every hour or so. Body length rather than legspan.
And "the contents of the package may have been compressed during transportation" is not an excuse if the spider you sold does not match the measurements you had in the sales ad.
By far the best method I've seenthis is still how i measure
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moose![]()
I always thought it was from the tip of L1 to the tip of R4. :?Stretched/flattened, from the tip of L1 on one side to the tip of L4 on the other. Diagonal Leg Span, or DLS.
Hard to do with a live spider, usually done on molts.
Marga